Repeating fast radio bursts with WSRT/Apertif
L. C. Oostrum, Y. Maan, J. van Leeuwen, L. Connor, E. Petroff, J. J., Attema, J. E. Bast, D. W. Gardenier, J. E. Hargreaves, E. Kooistra, D. van, der Schuur, A. Sclocco, R. Smits, S. M. Straal, S. ter Veen, D. Vohl, E. A., K. Adams, B. Adebahr, W. J. G. de Blok

TL;DR
This study uses WSRT/Apertif to observe repeating FRBs, characterizing their burst properties, localizations, and energy distributions, providing new insights into their emission mechanisms and population behaviors.
Contribution
It presents the first extensive follow-up of two repeating FRBs with improved localization, burst characterization, and constraints on their polarization and energy distribution.
Findings
Detected 30 bursts from R1 with increased DM
Placed upper limit of 8% on linear polarization fraction
Did not detect any bursts from R2, suggesting high clustering or spectral steepness
Abstract
Repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) present excellent opportunities to identify FRB progenitors and host environments, as well as decipher the underlying emission mechanism. Detailed studies of repeating FRBs might also hold clues to the origin of FRBs as a population. We aim to detect the first two repeating FRBs: FRB 121102 (R1) and FRB 180814.J0422+73 (R2), and characterise their repeat statistics. We also want to significantly improve the sky localisation of R2. We use the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope to conduct extensive follow-up of these two repeating FRBs. The new phased-array feed system, Apertif, allows covering the entire sky position uncertainty of R2 with fine spatial resolution in one pointing. We characterise the energy distribution and the clustering of detected R1 bursts. We detected 30 bursts from R1. Our measurements indicate a dispersion measure of 563.5(2) pc…
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.
