Non-Axisymmetric Precession of Magnetars and Fast Radio Bursts
Ira Wasserman (1, 2), James M. Cordes (1), Shami Chatterjee (1) and, Gauri Batra (2) ((1) Cornell Center for Astrophysics, Planetary Sciences,, Cornell University, (2) Laboratory for Elementary Particle Physics, Cornell, University)

TL;DR
This paper explores how internal magnetic field configurations and precession in magnetars could explain the periodic activity of certain fast radio bursts, proposing a model with complex magnetic components affecting observability.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed magnetic field model for precessing magnetars and analyzes the implications for FRB periodicity and spin frequency detection.
Findings
Strong internal magnetic fields prevent vortex pinning.
Disordered magnetic fields enable precession and decay over ~1000 years.
Detectability of spin frequency depends on precession geometry.
Abstract
The repeating FRBs 180916.J0158 and 121102 are visible during periodically-occuring windows in time. We consider the constraints on internal magnetic fields and geometry if the cyclical behavior observed for FRB~180916.J0158 and FRB 121102 is due to precession of magnetars. In order to frustrate vortex line pinning we argue that internal magnetic fields must be stronger than about Gauss, which is large enough to prevent superconductivity in the core and destroy the crustal lattice structure. We conjecture that the magnetic field inside precessing magnetars has three components, (1) a dipole component with characteristic strength Gauss; (2) a toroidal component with characteristic strength Gauss which only occupies a modest fraction of the stellar volume; and (3) a disordered field with characteristic strength Gauss. The…
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