Multiwavelength Radio Observations of Two Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources: FRB 121102 and FRB 180916.J0158+65
Aaron B. Pearlman, Walid A. Majid, Thomas A. Prince, Kenzie Nimmo,, Jason W. T. Hessels, Charles J. Naudet, Jonathon Kocz

TL;DR
This study conducted long-term multiwavelength radio observations of two repeating FRB sources, revealing frequency-dependent activity and spectral properties, with implications for understanding their emission mechanisms and environments.
Contribution
It provides the first simultaneous multi-frequency radio monitoring of these sources, showing frequency-dependent burst activity and spectral characteristics that inform FRB progenitor models.
Findings
FRB 121102 emitted bursts at 2.3 GHz but not at 8.4 GHz.
FRB 180916.J0158+65 showed activity at lower frequencies but not at higher frequencies.
High-frequency bursts are fewer and fainter, indicating narrowband emission.
Abstract
The spectra of fast radio bursts (FRBs) encode valuable information about the source's local environment, underlying emission mechanism(s), and the intervening media along the line of sight. We present results from a long-term multiwavelength radio monitoring campaign of two repeating FRB sources, FRB 121102 and FRB 180916.J0158+65, with the NASA Deep Space Network (DSN) 70-m radio telescopes (DSS-63 and DSS-14). The observations of FRB 121102 were performed simultaneously at 2.3 and 8.4 GHz, and spanned a total of 27.3 hr between 2019 September 19 and 2020 February 11. We detected 2 radio bursts in the 2.3 GHz frequency band from FRB 121102, but no evidence of radio emission was found at 8.4 GHz during any of our observations. We observed FRB 180916.J0158+65 simultaneously at 2.3 and 8.4 GHz, and also separately in the 1.5 GHz frequency band, for a total of 101.8 hr between 2019…
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