First Discovery of a Fast Radio Burst at 350 MHz by the GBNCC Survey
E. Parent, P. Chawla, V. M. Kaspi, G. Y. Agazie, H. Blumer, M., DeCesar, W. Fiore, E. Fonseca, J. W. T. Hessels, D. L. Kaplan, V. I., Kondratiev, M. LaRose, L. Levin, E. F. Lewis, R. S. Lynch, A. E. McEwen, M., A. McLaughlin, M. Mingyar, H. Al Noori, S. M. Ransom

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of a fast radio burst at 350 MHz, demonstrating the survey's capability to find such events and providing insights into their properties and rates at low frequencies.
Contribution
First discovery of an FRB at 350 MHz by the GBNCC survey, expanding the frequency range of known FRB detections and analyzing its implications for FRB populations.
Findings
FRB detected at 350 MHz with a flux density of 0.37 Jy
Estimated all-sky FRB rate at 350 MHz is approximately 3400 per day
No evidence of interstellar scattering in the detected FRB
Abstract
We report the first discovery of a fast radio burst (FRB), FRB 20200125A, by the Green Bank Northern Celestial Cap (GBNCC) Pulsar Survey conducted with the Green Bank Telescope at 350 MHz. FRB 20200125A was detected at a Galactic latitude of 58.43 degrees with a dispersion measure of 179 pc cm, while electron density models predict a maximum Galactic contribution of 25 pc cm along this line of sight. Moreover, no apparent Galactic foreground sources of ionized gas that could account for the excess DM are visible in multi-wavelength surveys of this region. This argues that the source is extragalactic. The maximum redshift for the host galaxy is , corresponding to a maximum comoving distance of approximately 750 Mpc. The measured peak flux density for FRB 20200125A is 0.37 Jy, and we measure a pulse width of 3.7 ms, consistent with the distribution of FRB…
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