A fast radio burst with sub-millisecond quasi-periodic structure
In\'es Pastor-Marazuela, Joeri van Leeuwen, Anna Bilous, Liam Connor,, Yogesh Maan, Leon Oostrum, Emily Petroff, Samayra Straal, Dany Vohl, E. A. K., Adams, B. Adebahr, Jisk Attema, Oliver M. Boersma, R. van den Brink, W. A., van Cappellen, A. H. W. M. Coolen, S. Damstra

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a fast radio burst with sub-millisecond quasi-periodic components, providing new clues about its progenitor and challenging existing models like neutron star rotation and mergers.
Contribution
It presents the first observation of a one-off FRB with regular sub-millisecond components, and analyzes its implications for FRB progenitor theories.
Findings
Periodic structure is marginally significant at 2.5σ.
Fast periodicity exceeds neutron star spin limits, ruling out pulsar rotation.
Sub-millisecond spacing challenges neutron star and merger models.
Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are extragalactic radio transients of extraordinary luminosity. Studying the diverse temporal and spectral behaviour recently observed in a number of FRBs may help determine the nature of the entire class. For example, a fast spinning or highly magnetised neutron star might generate the rotation-powered acceleration required to explain the bright emission. Periodic, sub-second components, suggesting such rotation, were recently reported in one FRB, and potentially in two more. Here we report the discovery of FRB 20201020A with Apertif, an FRB showing five components regularly spaced by 0.415 ms. This sub-millisecond structure in FRB 20201020A carries important clues about the progenitor of this FRB specifically, and potentially about that of FRBs in general. We thus contrast its features to the predictions of the main FRB source models. We perform a timing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
