The NANOGrav 15 yr dataset: Targeted searches for supermassive black hole binariesOpen Access

Agarwal, Nikita; et al. [NANOGrav Collaboration]

Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift) | Peer reviewed

Zusammenfassung

We present the first targeted searches for continuous gravitational waves (CWs) from 114 active galactic nuclei that may host supermassive black hole binaries, using the NANOGrav 15 yr dataset. By incorporating electromagnetic priors on sky location, distance, redshift, and CW frequency, our strain and chirp-mass upper limits are typically improved by a factor of ∼2 (median 2.2) relative to all-sky limits at the same frequency. Bayesian comparisons against a model including only a Hellings–Downs-correlated background disfavors a CW signal for all targets, with a mean Bayes factor of 0.73 ± 0.32. Two targets have Bayes factors slightly above unity, but coherence tests, random-targeting experiments, and a conservative accounting of the 114-target trials factor all indicate that they are consistent with noise. We use these two candidates as worked examples to illustrate an end-to-end targeted CW search analysis and a suite of follow-up tests that future promising candidates would need to pass. We find that the electromagnetic interpretations of both candidates are ambiguous, and we update the constraints on a putative binary in 3C 66B, ruling out part of its previously allowed parameter space. Ultimately, our results demonstrate the current sensitivity of targeted pulsar timing array searches for CWs and define a road map for future multimessenger CW detections.

Details zur Publikation

FachzeitschriftAstrophysical Journal Letters (Astrophys. J. Lett.)
Jahrgang / Bandnr. / Volume998
Ausgabe / Heftnr. / Issue1
ArtikelnummerL11
StatusVeröffentlicht
Veröffentlichungsjahr2026 (05.02.2026)
Sprache, in der die Publikation verfasst istEnglisch
DOI10.3847/2041-8213/ae3719
StichwörterPulsar timing; gravitational waves; supermassive black holes

Autor*innen der Universität Münster

Schmitz, Kai
Juniorprofessur für Theoretische Elementarteilchenphysik (Prof. Schmitz)