McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Special Astrophysics Seminar

The Gravitational-Wave Universe seen by Pulsar Timing Arrays

Chiara Mingarelli

California Institute of Technology

Galaxy mergers are a standard aspect of galaxy formation and evolution, and most (likely all) large galaxies contain supermassive black holes. As part of the merging process, the supermassive black holes should in-spiral together and eventually merge, generating a background of gravitational radiation in the nanohertz and microhertz regime. Processes in the early Universe such as relic gravitational waves and cosmic strings may also generate gravitational radiation in the same frequency band. An array of precisely timed pulsars spread across the sky can form a galactic-scale gravitational wave detector in the nanohertz band. I describe the efforts to develop the pulsar timing array concept, and the recent limits that have emerged from North American and international efforts to constrain astrophysical phenomena at the heart of supermassive black hole mergers.

Tuesday, May 31st 2016, 15:30
McGill Space Institute (3550 University), Conference Room