Constraining very-high-energy and optical emission from FRB 121102 with the MAGIC telescopes
MAGIC Collaboration: V. A. Acciari (1), S. Ansoldi (2,20), L. A., Antonelli (3), A. Arbet Engels (4), C. Arcaro (5), D. Baack (6), A. Babi\'c, (7), B. Banerjee (8), P. Bangale (9), U. Barres de Almeida (9,10), J. A., Barrio (11), J. Becerra Gonz\'alez (1), W. Bednarek (12)

TL;DR
This study conducted simultaneous multi-wavelength observations of FRB 121102, setting upper limits on very-high-energy gamma-ray and optical emissions, and found no significant counterparts associated with the FRBs.
Contribution
First simultaneous VHE gamma-ray and optical observations of FRB 121102, providing the most stringent upper limits to date on high-energy and optical counterparts.
Findings
No VHE gamma-ray emission detected during observations.
Optical flux constrained to below 8.6 mJy around FRB times.
A marginal optical burst detected 4.3 seconds before an FRB, consistent with background.
Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are bright flashes observed typically at GHz frequencies with millisecond duration, whose origin is likely extragalactic. Their nature remains mysterious, motivating searches for counterparts at other wavelengths. FRB 121102 is so far the only source known to repeatedly emit FRBs and is associated with a host galaxy at redshift . We conducted simultaneous observations of FRB 121102 with the Arecibo and MAGIC telescopes during several epochs in 2016--2017. This allowed searches for millisecond-timescale burst emission in very-high-energy (VHE) gamma rays as well as the optical band. While a total of five FRBs were detected during these observations, no VHE emission was detected, neither of a persistent nature nor burst-like associated with the FRBs. The average integral flux upper limits above 100 GeV at 95% confidence level are $6.6 \times…
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.
