Pulsars and neutron stars/Noise in pulsar timing residuals

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Introduction

Types of noise

Observing-frequency independent noise

Outliers

RFI

Dealing with outliers

White noise

Measurement uncertainty and radiometer noise

Jitter

It is often assumed that if a sufficient number of individual pulses are added together then the resulting pulse profile will be stable. However, as the pulsar timing array projects push the limits of timing precision it is found that observations of some pulsars do not improve with increased telescope sensitivity. This is caused by "jitter noise" (the intrinsic variability in the shape of individual pulses from a pulsar). For instance, Osowski et al. (2011) showed that, even with a large telescope, the timing precision for PSR J0437-4715 could never be better than ~40ns with a 1-hour observation. Shannon & Cordes (2012) found similar results using Arecibo observations of PSR J1713+0747. Shannon et al. (2014) determined the jitter noise level for many of the millisecond pulsars observed at the Parkes observatory.

Shannon & Cordes (2012) provide an order-of-magnitude estimate of the amount of jitter noise for a given pulsar which depends upon the pulse width, W, period, P, and the observation time, t:

σJ0.2WPt

(where all parameters are measured in seconds).

Dealing with excess white noise in pulsar timing data sets

Red and (quasi)-periodic noise

Timing noise

Precession

Planets

Frequency-dependent noise

The solar wind

The interstellar medium

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