Measuring the mass of solar system planets using pulsar timing
D. J. Champion(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), Andrea Possenti(West Virginia University), A. N. Lommen(Franklin & Marshall College), D. C. Backer(University of California, Berkeley), R. N. Manchester(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), David J. Nice(Bryn Mawr College), Sarah Burke-Spolaor(Unknown), N. D. R. Bhat(Swinburne University of Technology), W. van Straten(ARC Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics), R. D. Ferdman(West Virginia University), I. H. Stairs(United States Naval Research Laboratory), J. P. W. Verbiest(Bielefeld University), M. B. Purver(University of Manchester), Roderick Edwards(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), D. R. B. Yardley(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), John Sarkissian(West Virginia University), Paul B. Demorest(National Radio Astronomy Observatory), A. W. Hotan(Curtin University), W. A. Coles(University of California San Diego), M. Burgay(West Virginia University), A. Pellizzoni, M. Bailes(Australian Research Council), G. Hobbs(Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation), W. M. Folkner(Jet Propulsion Laboratory), M. Krämer(University of Manchester), Nicolò D’Amico, P. Esposito
Cited by 4
Related Papers
A Massive Pulsar in a Compact Relativistic Binary
|Science|2013|3.8k
The NANOGrav 15 yr Data Set: Evidence for a Gravitational-wave Background
|The Astrophysical Journal Letters|2023|1.5k
Tests of General Relativity from Timing the Double Pulsar
|Science|2006|1.1k
A repeating fast radio burst
|Nature|2016|914
A Radio Pulsar Spinning at 716 Hz
|Science|2006|888