Fast radio bursts and their possible neutron star origins
| Authors | |
|---|---|
| Publication date | 2017 |
| Journal | Journal of Physics. Conference Series |
| Event | International Conference Physics of Neutron Stars - 2017. 50 years after |
| Article number | 012025 |
| Volume | Issue number | 932 |
| Number of pages | 7 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
The discovery of the ‘Lorimer Burst’, a little over a decade
ago, ignited renewed interest in searching for short-duration radio
transients (Lorimer et al 2007 Science 318 777). This event is now
considered to be the first established Fast Radio Burst (FRB), which is
a class of millisecond-duration radio transients (Thornton et al 2013
Science 341 53). The large dispersive delays observed in FRBs
distinguish them from the individual bright pulses from Galactic
pulsars, and suggests that they originate deep in extragalactic space.
Amazingly, FRBs are not rare: the implied event rate ranges up to many
thousands of events per sky, per day (Champion et al 2016 MNRAS 460
L30). The fact that only two dozen FRBs have been discovered to date is
a consequence of the limited sensitivity and field of view of current
radio telescopes (Petroff et al 2016 PASA 33 e045). The precise
localization of FRB 121102, the first and currently only FRB observed to
repeat (Spitler et al 2014 ApJ 790 101; Spitler et al 2016 Nature 531
202; Scholz et al 2016 ApJ 833 177), has led to the unambiguous
identification of its host galaxy and thus proven its extragalactic
origin and large energy scale (Chatterjee et al 2017 Nature 541 58;
Tendulkar et al 2017 ApJL 834 L7; Marcote et al 2017 ApJL 834 L8). It
remains unclear, however, whether all FRBs are capable of repeating
[many appear far less active (Petroff et al 2015 MNRAS 454 457)] or
whether FRB 121102 implies that there are multiple sub-classes.
Regardless, the repetitive nature of FRB 121102 and its localization to
within a star-forming region in the host galaxy (Bassa et al 2017 ApJL
843 L8) imply that the bursts might originate from an exceptionally
powerful neutron star – one necessarily quite unlike any we have
observed in the Milky Way. In these proceedings, I give a very brief
introduction to the FRB phenomenon and focus primarily on the insights
that FRB 121102 has provided thus far.
|
| Document type | Article |
| Note | International Conference Physics of Neutron Stars - 2017. 50 years after. 10–14 July 2017, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/932/1/012025 |
| Other links | http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017JPhCS.932a2025H |
| Downloads |
Fast radio bursts
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