According to "Nature" an article published in the January issue of "Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society" refers the results of the "International Timing Pulsar Array", a cooperation of six radiotelescopes including Arecibo, Green Bank, Sardinia, Lovell and Westerbork which measured the frequencies of 65 pulsars over a period of 15 yers. The pulsar frequency can vary by a very small amount when it is hit by a gravitational wave, so it must be measured with great precision.The original article puts forward the idea of a gravitational waves background similar to the Cosmic microwave background but says this is not yet definitely proven.Could our data on gamma ray pulsars be included in this project?
Tullio
Copyright © 2024 Einstein@Home. All rights reserved.
tullio wrote: Could our data
)
My guess is : probably not.
I reckon the gamma ray data may not by itself give a sufficiently good pulse definition - one only receives a single gamma photon per many thousands of revolutions - to be sufficiently precise about pulse arrival times, that could in turn reliably yield a demonstrable shift due to a gravitational wave.
Compare that to a radio pulsar where very many radio frequency photons are received per pulsar cycle.
Cheers, Mike.
I have made this letter longer than usual because I lack the time to make it shorter ...
... and my other CPU is a Ryzen 5950X :-) Blaise Pascal