Fast radio bursts at the dawn of the 2020s
E. Petroff, J. W. T. Hessels, D. R. Lorimer

TL;DR
Recent advances in FRB research have significantly expanded our understanding of their population, origins, and potential as cosmological tools, driven by new observations, localizations, and the discovery of links to magnetars.
Contribution
This review summarizes recent observational breakthroughs, including increased FRB detections, localizations, and the connection to magnetars, highlighting progress since 2019.
Findings
Over 600 FRBs now known, including 24 repeaters
Detection of FRB-like bursts from Galactic magnetar SGR 1935+2154
Localization of an FRB to a nearby globular cluster in M81
Abstract
Since the discovery of the first fast radio burst (FRB) in 2007, and their confirmation as an abundant extragalactic population in 2013, the study of these sources has expanded at an incredible rate. In our 2019 review on the subject we presented a growing, but still mysterious, population of FRBs -- 60 unique sources, 2 repeating FRBs, and only 1 identified host galaxy. However, in only a few short years new observations and discoveries have given us a wealth of information about these sources. The total FRB population now stands at over 600 published sources, 24 repeaters, and 19 host galaxies. Higher time resolution data, sustained monitoring, and precision localisations have given us insight into repeaters, host galaxies, burst morphology, source activity, progenitor models, and the use of FRBs as cosmological probes. The recent detection of a bright FRB-like burst from the Galactic…
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