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The NANOGrav 11-year Data Set: High-precision Timing of 45 Millisecond Pulsars

Authors
Zaven Arzoumanian,Adam Brazier
Sarah Burke-Spolaor,Sydney Chamberlin,Shami Chatterjee,Brian Christy,James M. Cordes,Neil J. Cornish,Fronefield Crawford,H. Thankful Cromartie,Kathryn Crowter,Megan E. DeCesar,Paul B. Demorest,Timothy Dolch,Justin A. Ellis,Robert D. Ferdman,Elizabeth C. Ferrara,Emmanuel Fonseca,Nathan Garver-Daniels,Peter A. Gentile,Daniel Halmrast,Eliu Huerta,Fredrick A. Jenet,Cody Jessup,Glenn Jones,Megan L. Jones,David L. Kaplan,Michael T. Lam,T. Joseph W. Lazio,Lina Levin,Andrea Lommen,Duncan R. Lorimer,Jing Luo,Ryan S. Lynch,Dustin Madison,Allison M. Matthews,Maura A. McLaughlin,Sean T. McWilliams,Chiara Mingarelli,Cherry Ng,David J. Nice,Timothy T. Pennucci,Scott M. Ransom,Paul S. Ray,Xavier Siemens,Joseph Simon,Renee Spiewak,Ingrid H. Stairs,Daniel R. Stinebring,Kevin Stovall,Joseph K. Swiggum,Stephen R. Taylor,Michele Vallisneri,Rutger van Haasteren,Sarah J. Vigeland,Weiwei Zhu,A. Brazier,S. Chamberlin,B. Christy,J. Cordes,N. Cornish,F. Crawford,H. Cromartie,Megan DeCesar,Paul Demorest,Justin Ellis,R. Ferdman,E. Ferrara,Nate Garver-Daniels,Peter Gentile,D. Huet,Fredrick Jenet,Megan Jones,D. Kaplan,Michael Lam,T. Lazio,L. Levin,A. Lommen,D. Lorimer,Ryan Lynch,A. Matthews,M. McLaughlin,Sean McWilliams,Y. Minenkov,D. Nice,Timothy Pennucci,S. Ransom,Paul Ray,R. Spiewak,I. Stairs,D. Stinebring,K. Stovall,Joseph Swiggum,Stephen Taylor,Rutger Haasteren
+93 authors
,Sarah Vigeland
Published
Apr 1, 2018
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Abstract

We present high-precision timing data over time spans of up to 11 years for 45 millisecond pulsars observed as part of the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) project, aimed at detecting and characterizing low-frequency gravitational waves. The pulsars were observed with the Arecibo Observatory and/or the Green Bank Telescope at frequencies ranging from 327 MHz to 2.3 GHz. Most pulsars were observed with approximately monthly cadence, and six high-timing-precision pulsars were observed weekly. All were observed at widely separated frequencies at each observing epoch in order to fit for time-variable dispersion delays. We describe our methods for data processing, time-of-arrival (TOA) calculation, and the implementation of a new, automated method for removing outlier TOAs. We fit a timing model for each pulsar that includes spin, astrometric, and (for binary pulsars) orbital parameters; time-variable dispersion delays; and parameters that quantify pulse-profile evolution with frequency. The timing solutions provide three new parallax measurements, two new Shapiro delay measurements, and two new measurements of significant orbital-period variations. We fit models that characterize sources of noise for each pulsar. We find that 11 pulsars show significant red noise, with generally smaller spectral indices than typically measured for non-recycled pulsars, possibly suggesting a different origin. A companion paper uses these data to constrain the strength of the gravitational-wave background.

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