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Featured researches published by A. Brazier.


Nature | 2016

A repeating fast radio burst

L. G. Spitler; P. Scholz; J. W. T. Hessels; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; Shami Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; R. D. Ferdman; P. C. C. Freire; Victoria M. Kaspi; P. Lazarus; R. Lynch; E. Madsen; M. A. McLaughlin; C. Patel; Scott M. Ransom; A. Seymour; I. H. Stairs; B. W. Stappers; J. van Leeuwen; Weiwei Zhu

Fast radio bursts are millisecond-duration astronomical radio pulses of unknown physical origin that appear to come from extragalactic distances. Previous follow-up observations have failed to find additional bursts at the same dispersion measure (that is, the integrated column density of free electrons between source and telescope) and sky position as the original detections. The apparent non-repeating nature of these bursts has led to the suggestion that they originate in cataclysmic events. Here we report observations of ten additional bursts from the direction of the fast radio burst FRB 121102. These bursts have dispersion measures and sky positions consistent with the original burst. This unambiguously identifies FRB 121102 as repeating and demonstrates that its source survives the energetic events that cause the bursts. Additionally, the bursts from FRB 121102 show a wide range of spectral shapes that appear to be predominantly intrinsic to the source and which vary on timescales of minutes or less. Although there may be multiple physical origins for the population of fast radio bursts, these repeat bursts with high dispersion measure and variable spectra specifically seen from the direction of FRB 121102 support an origin in a young, highly magnetized, extragalactic neutron star.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Fast Radio Burst Discovered in the Arecibo Pulsar ALFA Survey

L. G. Spitler; J. M. Cordes; J. W. T. Hessels; D. R. Lorimer; M. A. McLaughlin; S. Chatterjee; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; Victoria M. Kaspi; R. S. Wharton; B. Allen; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; P. C. C. Freire; F. A. Jenet; C. Karako-Argaman; B. Knispel; P. Lazarus; K. J. Lee; J. van Leeuwen; Ryan S. Lynch; Scott M. Ransom; P. Scholz; X. Siemens; I. H. Stairs; K. Stovall; J. K. Swiggum; A. Venkataraman; W. W. Zhu

Recent work has exploited pulsar survey data to identify temporally isolated, millisecond-duration radio bursts with large dispersion measures (DMs). These bursts have been interpreted as arising from a population of extragalactic sources, in which case they would provide unprecedented opportunities for probing the intergalactic medium; they may also be linked to new source classes. Until now, however, all so-called fast radio bursts (FRBs) have been detected with the Parkes radio telescope and its 13-beam receiver, casting some concern about the astrophysical nature of these signals. Here we present FRB 121102, the first FRB discovery from a geographic location other than Parkes. FRB 121102 was found in the Galactic anti-center region in the 1.4?GHz Pulsar Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFA) survey with the Arecibo Observatory with a DM = 557.4 ? 2.0 pc cm?3, pulse width of 3.0 ? 0.5 ms, and no evidence of interstellar scattering. The observed delay of the signal arrival time with frequency agrees precisely with the expectation of dispersion through an ionized medium. Despite its low Galactic latitude (b = ?0.?2), the burst has three times the maximum Galactic DM expected along this particular line of sight, suggesting an extragalactic origin. A peculiar aspect of the signal is an inverted spectrum; we interpret this as a consequence of being detected in a sidelobe of the ALFA receiver. FRB 121102s brightness, duration, and the inferred event rate are all consistent with the properties of the previously detected Parkes bursts.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

LIMITS ON THE STOCHASTIC GRAVITATIONAL WAVE BACKGROUND FROM THE NORTH AMERICAN NANOHERTZ OBSERVATORY FOR GRAVITATIONAL WAVES

Paul Demorest; R. D. Ferdman; M. E. Gonzalez; David J. Nice; Scott M. Ransom; I. H. Stairs; Zaven Arzoumanian; A. Brazier; S. Burke-Spolaor; S. J. Chamberlin; J. M. Cordes; J. A. Ellis; L. S. Finn; P. C. C. Freire; S. Giampanis; F. A. Jenet; V. M. Kaspi; Joseph Lazio; Andrea N. Lommen; M. A. McLaughlin; Nipuni Palliyaguru; Delphine Perrodin; R. M. Shannon; X. Siemens; Daniel R. Stinebring; J. K. Swiggum; W. W. Zhu

We present an analysis of high-precision pulsar timing data taken as part of the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) project. We have observed 17 pulsars for a span of roughly five years using the Green Bank and Arecibo radio telescopes. We analyze these data using standard pulsar timing models, with the addition of time-variable dispersion measure and frequency-variable pulse shape terms. Sub-microsecond timing residuals are obtained in nearly all cases, and the best rms timing residuals in this set are ~30-50 ns. We present methods for analyzing post-fit timing residuals for the presence of a gravitational wave signal with a specified spectral shape. These optimally take into account the timing fluctuation power removed by the model fit, and can be applied to either data from a single pulsar, or to a set of pulsars to detect a correlated signal. We apply these methods to our data set to set an upper limit on the strength of the nHz-frequency stochastic supermassive black hole gravitational wave background of h_c (1 yr^(–1)) < 7 × 10^(–15) (95%). This result is dominated by the timing of the two best pulsars in the set, PSRs J1713+0747 and J1909–3744.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

The NANOGrav Nine-year Data Set: Limits on the Isotropic Stochastic Gravitational Wave Background

Zaven Arzoumanian; A. Brazier; S. Burke-Spolaor; S. J. Chamberlin; S. Chatterjee; B. Christy; J. M. Cordes; Neil J. Cornish; K. Crowter; Paul Demorest; X. Deng; T. Dolch; Justin Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; E. Fonseca; N. Garver-Daniels; M. E. Gonzalez; F. A. Jenet; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; V. M. Kaspi; M. Koop; M. T. Lam; T. J. W. Lazio; Lina Levin; Andrea N. Lommen; D. R. Lorimer; J. Luo; R. S. Lynch; D. R. Madison

We compute upper limits on the nanohertz-frequency isotropic stochastic gravitational wave background (GWB) using the 9 year data set from the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) collaboration. Well-tested Bayesian techniques are used to set upper limits on the dimensionless strain amplitude (at a frequency of 1 yr^(−1) for a GWB from supermassive black hole binaries of A_(gw) < 1.5 x 10^(-15). We also parameterize the GWB spectrum with a broken power-law model by placing priors on the strain amplitude derived from simulations of Sesana and McWilliams et al. Using Bayesian model selection we find that the data favor a broken power law to a pure power law with odds ratios of 2.2 and 22 to one for the Sesana and McWilliams prior models, respectively. Using the broken power-law analysis we construct posterior distributions on environmental factors that drive the binary to the GW-driven regime including the stellar mass density for stellar-scattering, mass accretion rate for circumbinary disk interaction, and orbital eccentricity for eccentric binaries, marking the first time that the shape of the GWB spectrum has been used to make astrophysical inferences. Returning to a power-law model, we place stringent limits on the energy density of relic GWs, Ω_(gw)(f)h^2 < 4.2 x 10^(-10). Our limit on the cosmic string GWB, Ω_(gw)(f)h^2 < 2.2 x 10^(-10), translates to a conservative limit on the cosmic string tension with Gµ < 3.3 x 10^(-8), a factor of four better than the joint Planck and high-l cosmic microwave background data from other experiments.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

Arecibo pulsar survey using ALFA: probing radio pulsar intermittency and transients

Julia S. Deneva; J. M. Cordes; M. A. McLaughlin; David J. Nice; D. R. Lorimer; F. Crawford; N. D. R. Bhat; F. Camilo; D. J. Champion; P. C. C. Freire; S. Edel; V. I. Kondratiev; J. W. T. Hessels; Fredrick A. Jenet; L. Kasian; V. M. Kaspi; M. Kramer; P. Lazarus; Scott M. Ransom; I. H. Stairs; B. W. Stappers; J. van Leeuwen; A. Brazier; A. Venkataraman; J. A. Zollweg; S. Bogdanov

We present radio transient search algorithms, results, and statistics from the ongoing Arecibo Pulsar ALFA (PALFA) survey of the Galactic plane. We have discovered seven objects through a search for isolated dispersed pulses. All of these objects are Galactic and have measured periods between 0.4 and 4.7 s. One of the new discoveries has a duty cycle of 0.01%, smaller than that of any other radio pulsar. We discuss the impact of selection effects on the detectability and classification of intermittent sources, and compare the efficiencies of periodicity and single-pulse (SP) searches for various pulsar classes. For some cases we find that the apparent intermittency is likely to be caused by off-axis detection or a short time window that selects only a few bright pulses and favors detection with our SP algorithm. In other cases, the intermittency appears to be intrinsic to the source. No transients were found with DMs large enough to require that they originate from sources outside our Galaxy. Accounting for the on-axis gain of the ALFA system, as well as the low gain but large solid-angle coverage of far-out sidelobes, we use the results of the survey so far to place limits on the amplitudes and event rates of transients of arbitrary origin.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

Gravitational Waves from Individual Supermassive Black Hole Binaries in Circular Orbits: Limits from the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves

Zaven Arzoumanian; A. Brazier; S. Burke-Spolaor; S. J. Chamberlin; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; Paul Demorest; X. Deng; T. Dolch; J. A. Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; N. Garver-Daniels; F. A. Jenet; Glenn Jones; V. M. Kaspi; M. Koop; M. T. Lam; T. J. W. Lazio; Andrea N. Lommen; D. R. Lorimer; J. Luo; Ryan S. Lynch; D. R. Madison; M. A. McLaughlin; Sean T. McWilliams; David J. Nice; Nipuni Palliyaguru; T. T. Pennucci; Scott M. Ransom; Alberto Sesana

The North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) project currently observes 43 pulsars using the Green Bank and Arecibo radio telescopes. In this work we use a subset of 17 pulsars timed for a span of roughly five years (2005--2010). We analyze these data using standard pulsar timing models, with the addition of time-variable dispersion measure and frequency-variable pulse shape terms. Within the timing data, we perform a search for continuous gravitational waves from individual supermassive black hole binaries in circular orbits using robust frequentist and Bayesian techniques. We find that there is no evidence for the presence of a detectable continuous gravitational wave; however, we can use these data to place the most constraining upper limits to date on the strength of such gravitational waves. Using the full 17 pulsar dataset we place a 95% upper limit on the sky-averaged strain amplitude of


Science | 2010

Pulsar discovery by global volunteer computing

B. Knispel; B. Allen; J. M. Cordes; J. S. Deneva; David P. Anderson; C. Aulbert; N. D. R. Bhat; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; D. J. Champion; S. Chatterjee; F. Crawford; Paul Demorest; H. Fehrmann; P. C. C. Freire; M. E. Gonzalez; D. Hammer; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; L. Kasian; Victoria M. Kaspi; M. Kramer; P. Lazarus; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; A. G. Lyne; B. Machenschalk; M. A. McLaughlin

h_0\lesssim 3.8\times 10^{-14}


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

TWO MILLISECOND PULSARS DISCOVERED BY THE PALFA SURVEY AND A SHAPIRO DELAY MEASUREMENT

J. S. Deneva; P. C. C. Freire; J. M. Cordes; A. G. Lyne; Scott M. Ransom; I. Cognard; F. Camilo; David J. Nice; I. H. Stairs; B. Allen; N. D. R. Bhat; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; D. J. Champion; S. Chatterjee; F. Crawford; G. Desvignes; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; V. M. Kaspi; B. Knispel; M. Kramer; P. Lazarus; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; Ryan S. Lynch; M. A. McLaughlin; P. Scholz; X. Siemens; B. W. Stappers

at a frequency of 10 nHz. Furthermore, we place 95% \emph{all sky} lower limits on the luminosity distance to such gravitational wave sources finding that the


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

ARECIBO PULSAR SURVEY USING ALFA. IV. MOCK SPECTROMETER DATA ANALYSIS, SURVEY SENSITIVITY, AND THE DISCOVERY OF 40 PULSARS

P. Lazarus; A. Brazier; J. W. T. Hessels; C. Karako-Argaman; V. M. Kaspi; R. Lynch; E. Madsen; C. Patel; Scott M. Ransom; P. Scholz; J. K. Swiggum; W. W. Zhu; B. Allen; S. Bogdanov; F. Camilo; F. Cardoso; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; R. D. Ferdman; P. C. C. Freire; F. A. Jenet; Benjamin Knispel; K. J. Lee; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; A. G. Lyne; M. A. McLaughlin; X. Siemens

d_L \gtrsim 425


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

Arecibo PALFA survey and Einstein@Home: Binary pulsar discovery by volunteer computing

B. Knispel; P. Lazarus; B. Allen; David P. Anderson; C. Aulbert; N. D. R. Bhat; O. Bock; S. Bogdanov; A. Brazier; F. Camilo; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; F. Crawford; J. S. Deneva; G. Desvignes; H. Fehrmann; P. C. C. Freire; D. Hammer; J. W. T. Hessels; F. A. Jenet; V. M. Kaspi; M. Kramer; J. van Leeuwen; D. R. Lorimer; A. G. Lyne; B. Machenschalk; M. A. McLaughlin; C. Messenger; David J. Nice; M. A. Papa

Mpc for sources at a frequency of 10 nHz and chirp mass

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