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A radio pulsar phase from SGR J1935+2154 provides clues to the magnetar FRB mechanism

Authors :
Zhu, Weiwei
Xu, Heng
Zhou, Dejiang
Lin, Lin
Wang, Bojun
Wang, Pei
Zhang, Chunfeng
Niu, Jiarui
Chen, Yutong
Li, Chengkui
Meng, Lingqi
Lee, Kejia
Zhang, Bing
Feng, Yi
Ge, Mingyu
Göğüş, Ersin
Guan, Xing
Han, Jinlin
Jiang, Jinchen
Jiang, Peng
Kouveliotou, Chryssa
Li, Di
Miao, Chenchen
Miao, Xueli
Men, Yunpeng
Niu, Chenghui
Wang, Weiyang
Wang, Zhengli
Xu, Jiangwei
Xu, Renxin
Xue, Mengyao
Yang, Yuanpei
Yu, Wenfei
Yuan, Mao
Yue, Youling
Zhang, Shuangnan
Zhang, Yongkun
Source :
Science Advances (2023) 9, 30
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The megajansky radio burst, FRB 20200428, and other bright radio bursts detected from the Galactic source SGR J1935+2154 suggest that magnetars can make fast radio bursts (FRBs), but the emission site and mechanism of FRB-like bursts are still unidentified. Here we report the emergence of a radio pulsar phase of the magnetar five months after FRB 20200428. 795 pulses were detected in 16.5 hours over 13 days by the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio telescope, with luminosities about eight decades fainter than FRB 20200428. The pulses were emitted in a narrow phase window anti-aligned with the X-ray pulsation profile observed by the X-ray telescopes. The bursts, conversely, appear in random phases. This dichotomy suggests that radio pulses originate from a fixed region within the magnetosphere, but bursts occur in random locations and are possibly associated with explosive events in a dynamically evolving magnetosphere. This picture reconciles the lack of periodicity in cosmological repeating FRBs within the magnetar engine model.<br />Comment: published on Science Advances, the authors' version

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Science Advances (2023) 9, 30
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2307.16124
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adf6198