A Millisecond Interferometric Search for Fast Radio Bursts with the Very Large Array
Casey J. Law (1), Geoffrey C. Bower (2), Sarah Burke-Spolaor (3,4),, Bryan Butler (4), Earl Lawrence (5), T. Joseph W. Lazio (3), Chris A., Mattmann (3), Michael Rupen (6), Andrew Siemion (1), and Scott VanderWiel (5), (1, UC Berkeley, 2, ASIAA, 3, JPL/Caltech, 4, NRAO, 5, LANL

TL;DR
This study conducted a millisecond-scale radio interferometric survey with the VLA to detect fast radio bursts, but found no transients, setting new limits on their occurrence rate and properties.
Contribution
First millisecond interferometric search for FRBs using the VLA, providing new constraints on FRB rates and repetition with detailed sensitivity analysis.
Findings
No FRBs detected in 166 hours of observations.
Set an upper limit on FRB rate at less than 7×10^4 per sky per day.
Revised FRB rate estimates considering observational effects.
Abstract
We report on the first millisecond timescale radio interferometric search for the new class of transient known as fast radio bursts (FRBs). We used the Very Large Array (VLA) for a 166-hour, millisecond imaging campaign to detect and precisely localize an FRB. We observed at 1.4 GHz and produced visibilities with 5 ms time resolution over 256 MHz of bandwidth. Dedispersed images were searched for transients with dispersion measures from 0 to 3000 pc/cm3. No transients were detected in observations of high Galactic latitude fields taken from September 2013 though October 2014. Observations of a known pulsar show that images typically had a thermal-noise limited sensitivity of 120 mJy/beam (8 sigma; Stokes I) in 5 ms and could detect and localize transients over a wide field of view. Our nondetection limits the FRB rate to less than 7e4/sky/day (95% confidence) above a fluence limit of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
