A High-Resolution View of Fast Radio Burst Host Environments
Alexandra G. Mannings, Wen-fai Fong, Sunil Simha, J. Xavier Prochaska,, Marc Rafelski, Charles D. Kilpatrick, Nicolas Tejos, Kasper E. Heintz,, Shivani Bhandari, Cherie K. Day, Adam T. Deller, Stuart D. Ryder, Ryan M., Shannon, Shriharsh P. Tendulkar

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope observations to analyze the environments of eight fast radio burst (FRB) host galaxies, revealing their spatial distributions, associations with galaxy features, and implications for FRB progenitors.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution spatial analysis of FRB hosts, comparing their locations with various transient populations and galaxy features, offering new insights into FRB origins.
Findings
FRBs occur at moderate offsets within their hosts.
Most FRBs are not in regions of high star formation.
Many FRB hosts show spiral arm features.
Abstract
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST/WFC3) ultraviolet and infrared observations of eight fast radio burst (FRB) host galaxies with sub-arcsecond localizations, including the hosts of three known repeating FRBs. We quantify their spatial distributions and locations with respect to their host galaxy light distributions, finding that they occur at moderate host normalized-offsets of 1.4 ([0.6,2.1] ; 68% interval), occur on fainter regions of their hosts in terms of IR light, but overall trace the radial distribution of IR light in their galaxies. The FRBs in our tested distribution do not clearly trace the distributions of any other transient population with known progenitors, and are statistically distinct from the locations of LGRBs, H-poor SLSNe, SGRBs, and Ca-rich transients. We further find that most FRBs are not in regions of elevated local star formation rate and…
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