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Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Page 1: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing

Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester

National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Page 2: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Outline• Gravitational Wave Wave

– Physics of gravitational waves– Gravitational wave detection– Gravitational wave sources

• Detecting G-wave by Pulsar Timing– Introduction to pulsar timing– PPTA project– Directly detecting gravitational wave

• Effect of ISM on Pulsar Timing– Dispersion measure change– Scintillation

Page 3: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Gravitational Wave: Ripples in

Spacetime!• Einstein field equation

• Weak field approximation

• Gravitational wave equation

TG 8

, 1g h h

1, where

2

16

h h h h h

h T

Page 4: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Properties of G-wave• Quadrupole moment• Two polarization states “+”

“×”

• Generation of G-waves

2

2,

3ij ij R

G dh t q t

R dtx

Page 5: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

G-wave Detection

• Interferometer detector– Basic formula: – LIGO: h~10-22, L=4 km, L~10-17cm– LISA: h~10-21, L=5×106 km, L~10-10cm

• Pulsar timing as G-wave detector– See pulsar timing part

1

2yx

LLh

L L

Page 6: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

G-wave Sources• High frequency (10 ~ 104 Hz, LIGO Band)

– Inspiraling compact binaries (NS and BH, MBH103M )

– Spinning neutron star

– Supernovae

– Gamma ray bursts

– Stochastic background

• Low frequency (10-4 ~ 1 Hz, LISA Band)– Galactic binaries

– Massive BH binary merger (104M MBH109M )

– MBH capture of compact object

– Collapse of super massive star

– Stochastic background

Page 7: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

G-wave Sources• Very low frequency (10-9 ~ 10-7 Hz, pulsar

timing)– Processes in the very early universe

• Big bang• Topological defects, cosmic strings• First-order phase transitions

– Inspiral of super-massive BH (MBH>1010M )

• Extremely low frequency (10-18 ~ 10-15 Hz)– Primordial gravitational fluctuations amplified

by the inflation of the universe– Method: imprint on the polarization of CMB

radiation

Page 8: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Pulsar Timing• Pulsars are excellent celestial clocks, especially MSP

• Basic pulsar timing observation

• The timing model, inertial observer

• Correct observed TOA to SSB

• Series TOAs corrected to SSB: ti

• Least squares fit time residual

2SSB obs corr R S E R S E/t t t D f

2

i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0

2 3

i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0

1

21 1

2 6

t t t t t

N t N t t t t t t

i i2

ii

N t n

Page 9: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Modeling Timing Residual and Timing “Noise”

From Hobbs et al. (2005)

Page 10: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Source of Timing Noise• Receiver noise• Clock noise• Intrinsic noise• Perturbations of pulsar motion

– G-wave background– Globular cluster accelerations– Orbital perturbations

• Propagation effects– Wind from binary companion– Variants in interstellar dispersion– Scintillation effects

• Perturbations of Earth’s motion– G-wave background– Errors in the Solar-system ephemeris

Page 11: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Indirect evidence of G-wavePSR B1913+16• First observational

evidence of G-wave

Nobel Prize for

Taylor & Hulse

in 1993 !From Weisberg & Taylor (2003)

Page 12: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Detect G-wave by pulsar timing

• Observation one pulsar, only put limit on strength of G-wave background

• New limits on G-wave radiation (Lommen, 2002)

9 20

c

2 10 h

Photon Path

Pulsar EarthG-w

ave

Page 13: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Direct detection of G-wave

• Observation of many pulsars

• Effect of G-wave background– Uncorrelated on individual pulsars – But correlated on the Earth

• Method: two point correlation

• Sensitive wave frequency 10-8 Hz

Page 14: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

PPTA project• Goal: detect G-wave & establish PSR timescale • Timing, 20 MSPs, 2-3 week interval, 5 years• 3 frequencies: 700 MHz, 1400 MHz and 3100 MHz• TOA precision: 100 ns > 10 pulsars, 1 s for others

Page 15: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Detect G-wave background

Simulation using PPTA pulsars with G-wave background from SMBH

(Jenet et al.)

Page 16: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Detect G-wave background

From Jenet et al. (2005)

14 15 2/32A , = , A=10 to 10 yr

3ch f G-wave from SMBH

A) Simple correlation, B) Pre-whiten

20 psrs, 100 ns, 250 obs, 5 years

Low-pass filtering

10 psrs, 100 ns, 250 obs, 5 years

10 psrs, 100ns, 10 psrs, 500 ns, 250 obs, 5 years

20 psrs, 100 ns, 250 obs, 5 years

20 psrs, 100 ns, 500 obs, 10 years

Page 17: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

ISM Effect on Pulsar Timing1. Dispersion measure variation

PSR B0458+46

From Hobbs et al. (2004)

What we will do: Calculate DM change for PPTA pulsars, improve the accuracy of pulsar timing

Method: Obtain DM from simultaneous multi-frequency observation

22 3 -1

1 2

1 1, MHz cm s pc

2

et K DM K

f f mc

DMdt

DMd0002.0

)(

Page 18: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

ISM Effect on Pulsar Timing2. Scintillation effect

• Scintillation affects precision of pulsar timing

• Second dynamic spectrum can deduce the time delay

PSR B1737+13

From Stinebring & Hemberger (2005)

What we will do:Study scintillation effect on PPTA pulsars, improve the accuracy of pulsar timing

Page 19: Gravitational Wave and Pulsar Timing Xiaopeng You, Jinlin Han, Dick Manchester National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Summary

• Gravitational wave detection is a major goal for current astronomy

• PPTA project has a chance for directly detecting gravitational wave

• Lots of works still need to be done to improve the accuracy of pulsar timing