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A CHIME/FRB study of burst rate and morphological evolution of the periodically repeating FRB 20180916B

Authors :
Sand, Ketan R.
Breitman, Daniela
Michilli, Daniele
Kaspi, Victoria M.
Chawla, Pragya
Fonseca, Emmanuel
Mckinven, Ryan
Nimmo, Kenzie
Pleunis, Ziggy
Shin, Kaitlyn
Andersen, Bridget C.
Bhardwaj, Mohit
Boyle, P. J.
Brar, Charanjot
Cassanelli, Tomas
Cook, Amanda M.
Curtin, Alice P.
Dong, Fengqiu Adam
Eadie, Gwendolyn M.
Gaensler, B. M.
Kaczmarek, Jane
Lanman, Adam
Leung, Calvin
Masui, Kiyoshi W.
Rahman, Mubdi
Pandhi, Ayush
Pearlman, Aaron B.
Petroff, Emily
Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud
Scholz, Paul
Shah, Vishwangi
Smith, Kendrick
Stairs, Ingrid
Stenning, David C.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
arXiv, 2023.

Abstract

FRB 20180916B is a repeating Fast Radio Burst (FRB) with a 16.3-day periodicity in its activity. In this study, we present morphological properties of 60 FRB 20180916B bursts detected by CHIME/FRB between 2018 August and 2021 December. We recorded raw voltage data for 45 of these bursts, enabling microseconds time resolution in some cases. We studied variation of spectro-temporal properties with time and activity phase. We find that the variation in Dispersion Measure (DM) is $\lesssim$1 pc cm$^{-3}$ and that there is burst-to-burst variation in scattering time estimates ranging from $\sim$0.16 to over 2 ms, with no discernible trend with activity phase for either property. Furthermore, we find no DM and scattering variability corresponding to the recent change in rotation measure from the source, which has implications for the immediate environment of the source. We find that FRB 20180916B has thus far shown no epochs of heightened activity as have been seen in other active repeaters by CHIME/FRB, with its burst count consistent with originating from a Poissonian process. We also observe no change in the value of the activity period over the duration of our observations and set a 1$\sigma$ upper limit of $1.5\times10^{-4}$ day day$^{-1}$ on the absolute period derivative. Finally, we discuss constraints on progenitor models yielded by our results, noting that our upper limits on changes in scattering and dispersion measure as a function of phase do not support models invoking a massive binary companion star as the origin of the 16.3-day periodicity.<br />Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b7099682578b1a69eb888c992cadee1c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2307.05839