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

Authors :
Law, C. J.
Abruzzo, M. W.
Bassa, C. G.
Bower, G. C.
Burke-Spolaor, S.
Butler, B. J.
Cantwell, T.
Carey, S. H.
Chatterjee, S.
Cordes, J. M.
Demorest, P.
Dowell, J.
Fender, R.
Gourdji, K.
Grainge, K.
Hessels, J. W. T.
Hickish, J.
Kaspi, V. M.
Lazio, T. J. W.
McLaughlin, M. A.
Michilli, D.
Mooley, K.
Perrott, Y. C.
Ransom, S. M.
Razavi-Ghods, N.
Rupen, M.
Scaife, A.
Scott, P.
Scholz, P.
Seymour, A.
Spitler, L. G.
Stovall, K.
Tendulkar, S. P.
Titterington, D.
Wharton, R. S.
Williams, P. K. G.
Publication Year :
2017

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 by 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. We use multi-observatory constraints and modeling of bursts seen only at 3 GHz to 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 $10^{40}$ 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 DM by up to 1%. We use FRB 121102 as a prototype of the FRB class to estimate a volumetric birth rate of FRB sources $R_{FRB} \approx 5x10^{-5}/N_r$ 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.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to AAS Journals

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1705.07553
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa9700