Limits on Fast Radio Bursts from Four Years of the V-FASTR Experiment
Sarah Burke-Spolaor, Cathryn M. Trott, Walter F. Brisken, Adam T., Deller, Walid A. Majid, Divya Palaniswamy, David R. Thompson, Steven J., Tingay, Kiri L. Wagstaff, Randall B. Wayth

TL;DR
This study uses four years of V-FASTR data to set upper limits on FRB rates at various wavelengths, constraining their spectral distribution and suggesting their dispersion occurs in intergalactic or host media rather than at the source.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive frequency-dependent limits on FRB spectral indices using long-term V-FASTR observations, informing models of FRB environments and emission.
Findings
V-FASTR sets upper limits on FRB rates at multiple wavelengths.
Spectral index constraints suggest limited free-free absorption.
Dispersion likely occurs in intergalactic or host galaxy media.
Abstract
The V-FASTR experiment on the Very Long Baseline Array was designed to detect dispersed pulses of milliseconds duration, such as fast radio bursts (FRBs). We use all V-FASTR data through February 2015 to report V-FASTR's upper limits on the rates of FRBs, and compare these with re-derived rates from Parkes FRB detection experiments. V-FASTR's operation at lambda=20 cm allows direct comparison with the 20 cm Parkes rate, and we derive a power-law limit of \gamma<-0.4 (95% confidence limit) on the index of FRB source counts, N(>S)\propto S^\gamma. Using the previously measured FRB rate and the unprecedented amount of survey time spent searching for FRBs at a large range of wavelengths (0.3 cm > \lambda > 90 cm), we also place frequency-dependent limits on the spectral distribution of FRBs. The most constraining frequencies place two-point spectral index limits of \alpha_{20cm}^{4cm} < 5.8…
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