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Featured researches published by C. Ng.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

The NANOGrav 11 Year Data Set: Pulsar-timing Constraints on the Stochastic Gravitational-wave Background

Zaven Arzoumanian; P. T. Baker; A. Brazier; S. Burke-Spolaor; S. J. Chamberlin; S. Chatterjee; B. Christy; J. M. Cordes; Neil J. Cornish; F. Crawford; H. Thankful Cromartie; K. Crowter; Megan E. DeCesar; Paul Demorest; T. Dolch; Justin Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; E. C. Ferrara; W. M. Folkner; E. Fonseca; N. Garver-Daniels; Peter A. Gentile; Roland Haas; J. S. Hazboun; E. A. Huerta; K. Islo; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; David L. Kaplan; V. M. Kaspi

We search for an isotropic stochastic gravitational-wave background (GWB) in the newly released 11 year data set from the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav). While we find no evidence for a GWB, we place constraints on a population of inspiraling supermassive black hole (SMBH) binaries, a network of decaying cosmic strings, and a primordial GWB. For the first time, we find that the GWB constraints are sensitive to the solar system ephemeris (SSE) model used and that SSE errors can mimic a GWB signal. We developed an approach that bridges systematic SSE differences, producing the first pulsar-timing array (PTA) constraints that are robust against SSE errors. We thus place a 95% upper limit on the GW-strain amplitude of A_(GWB) < 1.45 × 10^(−15) at a frequency of f = 1 yr^(−1) for a fiducial f^(−2/3) power-law spectrum and with interpulsar correlations modeled. This is a factor of ~2 improvement over the NANOGrav nine-year limit calculated using the same procedure. Previous PTA upper limits on the GWB (as well as their astrophysical and cosmological interpretations) will need revision in light of SSE systematic errors. We use our constraints to characterize the combined influence on the GWB of the stellar mass density in galactic cores, the eccentricity of SMBH binaries, and SMBH–galactic-bulge scaling relationships. We constrain the cosmic-string tension using recent simulations, yielding an SSE-marginalized 95% upper limit of Gμ < 5.3 × 10^(−11)—a factor of ~2 better than the published NANOGrav nine-year constraints. Our SSE-marginalized 95% upper limit on the energy density of a primordial GWB (for a radiation-dominated post-inflation universe) is Ω_(GWB)(f) h^2 < 3.4 × 10^(−10).


ursi general assembly and scientific symposium | 2017

CHIME FRB: An application of FFT beamforming for a radio telescope

C. Ng; K. Vanderlinde; Adiv Paradise; Peter Klages; Kiyoshi Masui; Kendrick M. Smith; Kevin Bandura; Patrick Joseph Boyle; Matt Dobbs; Victoria M. Kaspi; Andre Renard; J. Richard Shaw; I. H. Stairs; Ian Tretyakov

We have developed FFT beamforming techniques for the CHIME radio telescope, to search for and localize the astrophysical signals from Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) over a large instantaneous field-of-view (FOV) while maintaining the full angular resolution of CHIME. We implement a hybrid beamforming pipeline in a GPU correlator, synthesizing 256 FFT-formed beams in the North-South direction by four formed beams along East-West via exact phasing, tiling a sky area of ∼250 square degrees. A zero-padding approximation is employed to improve chromatic beam alignment across the wide bandwidth of 400 to 800 MHz. We up-channelize the data in order to achieve fine spectral resolution of Δν =24 kHz and time cadence of 0.983 ms, desirable for detecting transient and dispersed signals such as those from FRBs.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2018

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

Zaven Arzoumanian; A. Brazier; S. Burke-Spolaor; S. J. Chamberlin; Shami Chatterjee; B. Christy; James M. Cordes; Neil J. Cornish; F. Crawford; H. Thankful Cromartie; K. Crowter; Megan E. DeCesar; Paul Demorest; T. Dolch; Justin Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; Elizabeth C. Ferrara; Emmanuel Fonseca; N. Garver-Daniels; Peter A. Gentile; Daniel Halmrast; E. A. Huerta; Fredrick A. Jenet; Cody Jessup; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; David L. Kaplan; M. T. Lam; T. Joseph W. Lazio; Lina Levin

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.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

PSR J1024–0719: A Millisecond Pulsar in an Unusual Long-period Orbit

David L. Kaplan; T. Kupfer; David J. Nice; Andreas Irrgang; Ulrich Heber; Zaven Arzoumanian; Elif Beklen; K. Crowter; Megan E. DeCesar; Paul Demorest; T. Dolch; Justin Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; Elizabeth C. Ferrara; E. Fonseca; Peter A. Gentile; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; Simon Kreuzer; M. T. Lam; Lina Levin; D. R. Lorimer; R. S. Lynch; M. A. McLaughlin; Adam A. Miller; C. Ng; Timothy T. Pennucci; Thomas A. Prince; Scott M. Ransom; Paul S. Ray

PSR J1024


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

The NANOGrav 11 yr Data Set: Arecibo Observatory Polarimetry and Pulse Microcomponents

Peter A. Gentile; M. A. McLaughlin; Paul Demorest; I. H. Stairs; Zaven Arzoumanian; K. Crowter; T. Dolch; Megan E. DeCesar; Justin Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; Elizabeth C. Ferrara; E. Fonseca; M. E. Gonzalez; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; M. T. Lam; L. Levin; D. R. Lorimer; R. S. Lynch; C. Ng; David J. Nice; Timothy T. Pennucci; Scott M. Ransom; Paul S. Ray; R. Spiewak; K. Stovall; J. K. Swiggum; W. W. Zhu

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

A Second Chromatic Timing Event of Interstellar Origin toward PSR J1713+0747

M. T. Lam; Justin Ellis; G. Grillo; M. L. Jones; J. S. Hazboun; P. R. Brook; J. E. Turner; S. Chatterjee; J. M. Cordes; T. J. W. Lazio; Megan E. DeCesar; Zaven Arzoumanian; H. Blumer; H. T. Cromartie; Paul Demorest; T. Dolch; R. D. Ferdman; E. C. Ferrara; E. Fonseca; N. Garver-Daniels; Peter A. Gentile; V. Gupta; D. R. Lorimer; R. S. Lynch; D. R. Madison; M. A. McLaughlin; C. Ng; David J. Nice; T. T. Pennucci; S. M. Ransom

0719 is a millisecond pulsar that was long thought to be isolated. However, puzzling results concerning its velocity, distance, and low rotational period derivative have led to reexamination of its properties. We present updated radio timing observations along with new and archival optical data that show PSR J1024


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

A fast radio burst with a low dispersion measure

E Petroff; L.C. Oostrum; B. W. Stappers; M. Bailes; E. D. Barr; S. D. Bates; S. Bhandari; N. D. R. Bhat; M. Burgay; S. Burke-Spolaor; A. D. Cameron; D. J. Champion; R. P. Eatough; C M L Flynn; A. Jameson; S. Johnston; E. F. Keane; M. J. Keith; M. Kramer; L. Levin; Vincent Morello; C. Ng; A. Possenti; V. Ravi; W. van Straten; David J. Thornton; C. Tiburzi

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Archive | 2017

Algorithms for FFT Beamforming Radio Interferometers

Kiyoshi Wesley Masui; J. Richard Shaw; C. Ng; Kendrick M. Smith; K. Vanderlinde; Adiv Paradise

0719 is most likely in a long period (2


arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2018

The NANOGrav 11-year Data Set: Solar Wind Sounding Through Pulsar Timing.

D. R. Madison; J. M. Cordes; Zaven Arzoumanian; S. Chatterjee; K. Crowter; Megan E. DeCesar; Paul Demorest; T. Dolch; J. A. Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; E. C. Ferrara; E. Fonseca; Peter A. Gentile; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; M. T. Lam; L. Levin; D. R. Lorimer; R. S. Lynch; M. A. McLaughlin; C. M. F. Mingarelli; C. Ng; David J. Nice; T. T. Pennucci; S. M. Ransom; Paul S. Ray; R. Spiewak; I. H. Stairs; K. Stovall; J. K. Swiggum

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arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2018

The NANOGrav 12.5-Year Data Set: The Frequency Dependence of Pulse Jitter in Precision Millisecond Pulsars

M. T. Lam; David J. Nice; J. K. Swiggum; S. J. Vigeland; R. Spiewak; R. S. Lynch; Paul Demorest; D. R. Lorimer; R. D. Ferdman; J. A. Ellis; T. Dolch; McLaughlin; H. Blumer; K. Stovall; M. L. Jones; Megan E. DeCesar; P. R. Brook; Zaven Arzoumanian; N. Garver-Daniels; S. M. Ransom; E. Fonseca; Peter A. Gentile; I. H. Stairs; C. Ng; E. C. Ferrara; H. T. Cromartie; W. W. Zhu; T. T. Pennucci

20 kyr) binary system with a low-mass (

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M. L. Jones

West Virginia University

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Paul Demorest

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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Zaven Arzoumanian

Goddard Space Flight Center

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R. D. Ferdman

University of East Anglia

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