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Featured researches published by Justin Ellis.


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 | 2015

LIGHT CURVES OF CORE-COLLAPSE SUPERNOVAE WITH SUBSTANTIAL MASS LOSS USING THE NEW OPEN-SOURCE SUPERNOVA EXPLOSION CODE (SNEC)

Viktoriya S. Morozova; Anthony L. Piro; M. Renzo; Christian D. Ott; Drew Clausen; Sean M. Couch; Justin Ellis; Luke F. Roberts

We present the SuperNova Explosion Code (SNEC), an open-source Lagrangian code for the hydrodynamics and equilibrium-diffusion radiation transport in the expanding envelopes of supernovae. Given a model of a progenitor star, an explosion energy, and an amount and distribution of radioactive nickel, SNEC generates the bolometric light curve, as well as the light curves in different broad bands assuming black body emission. As a first application of SNEC, we consider the explosions of a grid of 15 Msun (at zero-age main sequence) stars whose hydrogen envelopes are stripped to different extents and at different points in their evolution. The resulting light curves exhibit plateaus with durations of ~20-100 days if >~1.5-2 Msun of hydrogen-rich material is left and no plateau if less hydrogen-rich material is left. If these shorter plateau lengths are not seen for Type IIP supernovae in nature, it suggests that, at least for zero-age main sequence masses <~ 20 Msun, hydrogen mass loss occurs as an all or nothing process. This perhaps points to the important role binary interactions play in generating the observed mass-stripped supernovae (i.e., Type Ib/c events). These light curves are also unlike what is typically seen for Type IIL supernovae, arguing that simply varying the amount of mass loss cannot explain these events. The most stripped models begin to show double-peaked light curves similar to what is often seen for Type IIb supernovae, confirming previous work that these supernovae can come from progenitors that have a small amount of hydrogen and a radius of ~500 Rsun.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

TESTING THEORIES OF GRAVITATION USING 21-YEAR TIMING OF PULSAR BINARY J1713+0747

Weiwei Zhu; I. H. Stairs; Paul Demorest; David J. Nice; Justin Ellis; Scott M. Ransom; Zaven Arzoumanian; K. Crowter; T. Dolch; R. D. Ferdman; E. Fonseca; M. E. Gonzalez; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; M. T. Lam; Lina Levin; M. A. McLaughlin; T. T. Pennucci; K. Stovall; J. K. Swiggum

We report 21-yr timing of one of the most precise pulsars: PSR J1713+0747. Its pulse times of arrival are well modeled by a comprehensive pulsar binary model including its three-dimensional orbit and a noise model that incorporates correlated noise such as jitter and red noise. Its timing residuals have weighted root mean square


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

ARE WE THERE YET? TIME TO DETECTION OF NANOHERTZ GRAVITATIONAL WAVES BASED ON PULSAR-TIMING ARRAY LIMITS

Stephen Taylor; M. Vallisneri; Justin Ellis; C. M. F. Mingarelli; T. J. W. Lazio; R. van Haasteren

\sim 92


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

From spin noise to systematics: stochastic processes in the first International Pulsar Timing Array data release

L. Lentati; R. M. Shannon; W. A. Coles; J. P. W. Verbiest; R. van Haasteren; Justin Ellis; R. N. Caballero; R. N. Manchester; Zaven Arzoumanian; S. Babak; C. G. Bassa; N. D. R. Bhat; P. Brem; M. Burgay; S. Burke-Spolaor; D. J. Champion; S. Chatterjee; I. Cognard; J. M. Cordes; S. Dai; Paul Demorest; G. Desvignes; T. Dolch; R. D. Ferdman; E. Fonseca; Jonathan R. Gair; M. E. Gonzalez; E. Graikou; L. Guillemot; J. W. T. Hessels

ns. The new dataset allows us to update and improve previous measurements of the system properties, including the masses of the neutron star (


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

Practical Methods for Continuous Gravitational Wave Detection Using Pulsar Timing Data

Justin Ellis; F. A. Jenet; M. A. McLaughlin

1.31\pm0.11


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

THE NANOGRAV NINE-YEAR DATA SET: ASTROMETRIC MEASUREMENTS OF 37 MILLISECOND PULSARS

Allison M. Matthews; David J. Nice; E. Fonseca; Zaven Arzoumanian; K. Crowter; Paul Demorest; T. Dolch; Justin Ellis; R. D. Ferdman; M. E. Gonzalez; Glenn Jones; M. L. Jones; M. T. Lam; Lina Levin; M. A. McLaughlin; Timothy T. Pennucci; Scott M. Ransom; I. H. Stairs; K. Stovall; J. K. Swiggum; W. W. Zhu


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

M_{\odot}


Physical Review D | 2015

Time-domain implementation of the optimal cross-correlation statistic for stochastic gravitational-wave background searches in pulsar timing data

S. J. Chamberlin; Jolien D. E. Creighton; X. Siemens; Paul Demorest; Justin Ellis; Lawrence Price; J. Romano

) and the companion white dwarf (


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

0.286\pm0.012

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Paul Demorest

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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Zaven Arzoumanian

Goddard Space Flight Center

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K. Crowter

University of British Columbia

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M. L. Jones

West Virginia University

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R. D. Ferdman

University of East Anglia

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