On the detectability of extragalactic fast radio transients
D.R. Lorimer, A. Karastergiou, M.A. McLaughlin, S. Johnston

TL;DR
This paper investigates the detectability of extragalactic fast radio transients, showing they could be observable at lower frequencies and providing models to estimate their rates and flux densities.
Contribution
It demonstrates that low-frequency surveys can detect these transients and offers a new model relating event rates to survey parameters, expanding the potential for discovery.
Findings
Detectability of transients extends to redshift ~0.5 at frequencies below 1 GHz.
Predicted flux densities at 150 MHz are around 30 Jy, enabling detection with small arrays.
Non-detections at certain surveys are consistent with the proposed model.
Abstract
Recent discoveries of highly dispersed millisecond radio bursts by Thornton et al. in a survey with the Parkes radio telescope at 1.4 GHz point towards an emerging population of sources at cosmological distances whose origin is currently unclear. Here we demonstrate that the scattering effects at lower radio frequencies are less than previously thought, and that the bursts could be detectable at redshifts out to about in surveys below 1 GHz. Using a source model in which the bursts are standard candles with bolometric luminosities ergs/s uniformly distributed per unit comoving volume, we derive an expression for the observed peak flux density as a function of redshift and use this, together with the rate estimates found by Thornton et al. to find an empirical relationship between event rate and redshift probed by a given survey. The non-detection of any…
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