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arxiv 1102.4824 v1 pith:JC6BH24N submitted 2011-02-23 gr-qc

Pulsar Timing Sensitivities to Gravitational Waves from Relativistic Metric Theories of Gravity

classification gr-qc
keywords gravitationalwavespulsartimingdetectionradiationtensortheory
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Pulsar timing experiments aimed at the detection of gravitational radiation have been performed for decades now. With the forthcoming construction of large arrays capable of tracking multiple millisecond pulsars, it is very likely we will be able to make the first detection of gravitational radiation in the nano-Hertz band, and test Einstein's theory of relativity by measuring the polarization components of the detected signals. Since a gravitational wave predicted by the most general relativistic metric theory of gravity accounts for {\it six} polarization modes (the usual two Einstein's tensor polarizations as well as two vector and two scalar wave components), we have estimated the single-antenna sensitivities to these six polarizations. We find pulsar timing experiments to be significantly more sensitive, over their entire observational frequency band ($\approx 10^{-9} - 10^{-6}$ Hz), to scalar-longitudinal and vector waves than to scalar-transverse and tensor waves. At $10^{-7}$ Hz and with pulsars at a distance of $1$ kpc, for instance, we estimate an average sensitivity to scalar-longitudinal waves that is more than two orders of magnitude better than the sensitivity to tensor waves. Our results imply that a direct detection of gravitational radiation by pulsar timing will result into a test of the theory of general relativity that is more stringent than that based on monitoring the decay of the orbital period of a binary system.

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  1. The Confrontation between General Relativity and Experiment

    gr-qc 2014-03 accept novelty 2.0

    Experiments confirm general relativity to high precision in weak-field and strong-field regimes, with gravitational wave damping matching predictions to better than 0.5 percent.