Constraining bright optical counterparts of Fast Radio Bursts
C. Nu\~nez, N. Tejos, G. Pignata, C. D. Kilpatrick, J. X. Prochaska,, K. E. Heintz, K. W. Bannister, S. Bhandari, C. K. Day, A. T. Deller, C., Flynn, E. K. Mahony, D. Majewski, L. Marnoch, H. Qiu, S. D. Ryder, R. M., Shannon

TL;DR
This study conducted optical follow-up observations of 8 well-localized FRBs using the LCOGT network, finding no optical counterparts and constraining possible associations with various transient phenomena.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic optical search for FRB counterparts at multiple epochs and sets stringent limits on their brightness, ruling out associations with several known transient classes.
Findings
No optical transients detected at FRB locations.
Ruled out association of FRBs with superluminous supernovae at 99.9% confidence.
Excluded brightest types of SNe, GRB SNe, and TDEs as FRB counterparts under certain conditions.
Abstract
Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are extremely energetic pulses of millisecond duration and unknown origin. In order to understand the phenomenon that emits these pulses, targeted and untargeted searches have been performed for multi-wavelength counterparts, including the optical. The objective of this work is to search for optical transients at the position of 8 well-localized FRBs, after the arrival of the burst on different time-scales (typically at one day, several months, and one year after FRB detection) in order to compare with known transient optical light curves. We used the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network (LCOGT), which allows us to promptly take images owing to its network of twenty-three telescopes working around the world. We used a template subtraction technique on all the images we collected at different epochs. We have divided the subtractions into two groups,…
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