The Host Galaxy and Redshift of the Repeating Fast Radio Burst FRB 121102
Shriharsh P. Tendulkar (McGill U.), Cees Bassa (ASTRON), James M., Cordes (Cornell U.), Geoffery C. Bower (ASIAA), Casey J. Law (UC Berkeley),, Shamibrata Chatterjee (Cornell U.), Elizabeth A. K. Adams (ASTRON), Slavko, Bogdanov (Columbia U.), Sarah Burke-Spolaor (NRAO, WVU)

TL;DR
This paper reports the precise localization and host galaxy identification of FRB 121102, revealing it resides in a low-metallicity, star-forming dwarf galaxy at redshift 0.19273, with implications for understanding the origins of repeating FRBs.
Contribution
First precise optical localization of FRB 121102's host galaxy, establishing its properties and environment, and linking it to dwarf, star-forming galaxies similar to those of long gamma-ray bursts.
Findings
FRB 121102 is in a low-metallicity, star-forming dwarf galaxy.
The host galaxy has a redshift of 0.19273 and a diameter less than 4 kpc.
The host's star formation rate is approximately 0.4 solar masses per year.
Abstract
The precise localization of the repeating fast radio burst (FRB 121102) has provided the first unambiguous association (chance coincidence probability ) of an FRB with an optical and persistent radio counterpart. We report on optical imaging and spectroscopy of the counterpart and find that it is an extended () object displaying prominent Balmer and [OIII] emission lines. Based on the spectrum and emission line ratios, we classify the counterpart as a low-metallicity, star-forming, AB mag dwarf galaxy at a redshift of , corresponding to a luminosity distance of 972 Mpc. From the angular size, the redshift, and luminosity, we estimate the host galaxy to have a diameter kpc and a stellar mass of , assuming a mass-to-light ratio between 2 to…
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