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A High-Time Resolution Search for Compact Objects using Fast Radio Burst Gravitational Lens Interferometry with CHIME/FRB

Authors :
Kader, Zarif
Leung, Calvin
Dobbs, Matt
Masui, Kiyoshi W.
Michilli, Daniele
Mena-Parra, Juan
Mckinven, Ryan
Ng, Cherry
Bandura, Kevin
Bhardwaj, Mohit
Brar, Charanjot
Cassanelli, Tomas
Chawla, Pragya
Dong, Fengqiu Adam
Good, Deborah
Kaspi, Victoria
Lanman, Adam E.
Lin, Hsiu-Hsien
Meyers, Bradley W.
Pearlman, Aaron B.
Pen, Ue-Li
Petroff, Emily
Pleunis, Ziggy
Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud
Rahman, Mubdi
Sanghavi, Pranav
Scholz, Paul
Shin, Kaitlyn
Siegel, Seth
Smith, Kendrick M.
Stairs, Ingrid
Tendulkar, Shriharsh P.
Vanderlinde, Keith
Wulf, Dallas
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
arXiv, 2022.

Abstract

The gravitational field of compact objects, such as primordial black holes, can create multiple images of background sources. For transients such as fast radio bursts (FRBs), these multiple images can be resolved in the time domain. Under certain circumstances, these images not only have similar burst morphologies but are also phase-coherent at the electric field level. With a novel dechannelization algorithm and a matched filtering technique, we search for repeated copies of the same electric field waveform in observations of FRBs detected by the FRB backend of the Canadian Hydrogen Mapping Intensity Experiment (CHIME). An interference fringe from a coherent gravitational lensing signal will appear in the time-lag domain as a statistically-significant peak in the time-lag autocorrelation function. We calibrate our statistical significance using telescope data containing no FRB signal. Our dataset consists of $\sim$100-ms long recordings of voltage data from 172 FRB events, dechannelized to 1.25-ns time resolution. This coherent search algorithm allows us to search for gravitational lensing signatures from compact objects in the mass range of $10^{-4}-10^{4} ~\mathrm{M_{\odot}}$. After ruling out an anomalous candidate due to diffractive scintillation, we find no significant detections of gravitational lensing in the 172 FRB events that have been analyzed. In a companion work [Leung, Kader+2022], we interpret the constraints on dark matter from this search.<br />Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e578901a09282431f14a6f91cfc4216
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2204.06014