A Multi-telescope Campaign on FRB 121102 Implications for the FRB Population

Authors
  • C.J. Law
  • M.W. Abruzzo
  • C.G. Bassa
  • G.C. Bower
  • S. Burke-Spolaor
  • B.J. Butler
  • T. Cantwell
  • S.H. Carey
  • S. Chatterjee
  • J.M. Cordes
  • P. Demorest
  • J. Dowell
  • R. Fender
  • K. Gourdji
  • K. Grainge
  • J.W.T. Hessels
  • J. Hickish
  • V.M. Kaspi
  • T.J.W. Lazio
  • M.A. McLaughlin
  • D. Michilli
  • K. Mooley
  • Y.C. Perrott
  • S.M. Ransom
  • N. Razavi-Ghods
  • M. Rupen
  • A. Scaife
  • P. Scott
  • P. Scholz
  • A. Seymour
  • L.G. Spitler
  • K. Stovall
  • S.P. Tendulkar
  • D. Titterington
  • R.S. Wharton
  • P.K.G. Williams
Publication date 2017
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 76
Volume | Issue number 850 | 1
Number of pages 14
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We present results of the coordinated observing campaign that made the first subarcsecond localization of a fast radio burst, FRB 121102. During this campaign, we made the first simultaneous detection of an FRB burst using multiple telescopes: the VLA at 3 GHz and the Arecibo Observatory at 1.4 GHz. Of the nine bursts detected by the Very Large Array at 3 GHz, four had simultaneous observing coverage at other observatories at frequencies from 70 MHz to 15 GHz. The one multi-observatory detection and three non-detections of bursts seen at 3 GHz confirm earlier results showing that burst spectra are not well modeled by a power law. We find that burst spectra are characterized by a ∼500 MHz envelope and apparent radio energy as high as 1040 erg. We measure significant changes in the apparent dispersion between bursts that can be attributed to frequency-dependent profiles or some other intrinsic burst structure that adds a systematic error to the estimate of dispersion measure by up to 1%. We use FRB 121102 as a prototype of the FRB class to estimate a volumetric birth rate of FRB sources {R}{FRB}≈ 5× {10}-5/{N}r Mpc‑3 yr‑1, where N r is the number of bursts per source over its lifetime. This rate is broadly consistent with models of FRBs from young pulsars or magnetars born in superluminous supernovae or long gamma-ray bursts if the typical FRB repeats on the order of thousands of times during its lifetime.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa9700
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017ApJ...850...76L
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