Detection of two bright radio bursts from magnetar SGR 1935+2154
F. Kirsten (Chalmers), M. Snelders (University of Amsterdam), M., Jenkins (University of Amsterdam), K. Nimmo (University of Amsterdam,, ASTRON), J. van den Eijnden (University of Amsterdam), J. Hessels (University, of Amsterdam, ASTRON), M. Gawronski (NCU, Torun)

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of two bright radio bursts from magnetar SGR 1935+2154, supporting the idea that magnetars can produce fast radio bursts (FRBs) with a wide range of energies, including very low energies.
Contribution
First detection of multiple bright radio bursts from SGR 1935+2154 with detailed polarization and timing analysis, linking magnetar activity to the broader FRB population.
Findings
Bursts show significant polarization and scattering effects.
Burst energies span seven orders of magnitude, indicating diverse emission strengths.
Burst rate is consistent across different energy levels.
Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration, bright radio signals (fluence ) emitted from extragalactic sources of unknown physical origin. The recent CHIME/FRB and STARE2 detection of an extremely bright (fluence MJyms) radio burst from the Galactic magnetar SGR~19352154 supports the hypothesis that (at least some) FRBs are emitted by magnetars at cosmological distances. In follow-up observations totalling 522.7hrs on source, we detect two bright radio bursts with fluences of and , respectively. Both bursts appear affected by interstellar scattering and we measure significant linear and circular polarisation for the fainter burst. The bursts are separated in time by 1.4s, suggesting a non-Poissonian, clustered emission process -- similar to what has been seen in some…
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