First discoveries and localisations of Fast Radio Bursts with MeerTRAP: a real-time, commensal MeerKAT survey
K. M. Rajwade, M. C. Bezuidenhout, M. Caleb, L. N. Driessen, F., Jankowski, M. Malenta, V. Morello, S. Sanidas, B. W. Stappers, M. P. Surnis,, E. D. Barr, W. Chen, M. Kramer, J. Wu, S. Buchner, M. Serylak, F. Combes, W., Fong, N. Gupta, P. Jagannathan, C. D. Kilpatrick

TL;DR
This paper reports the first discoveries and localizations of FRBs using the MeerTRAP survey at MeerKAT, combining coherent and incoherent searches, and provides insights into their properties, scattering, and potential host galaxy associations.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid real-time detection method for FRBs with MeerKAT and reports the first three localized FRBs, including their unique features and potential host galaxy identification.
Findings
Discovered three FRBs with different detection methods.
Observed scattering and intrinsic emission features in FRBs.
Identified a likely host galaxy for one FRB.
Abstract
We report on the discovery and localization of fast radio bursts (FRBs) from the MeerTRAP project, a commensal fast radio transient-detection programme at MeerKAT in South Africa. Our hybrid approach combines a coherent search with an average field-of-view of 0.4 with an incoherent search utilizing a field-of-view of 1.27 (both at 1284~MHz). Here, we present results on the first three FRBs: FRB 20200413A (DM=1990.05 pc cm), FRB 20200915A (DM=740.65 pc cm), and FRB 20201123A (DM=433.55 pc cm). FRB 20200413A was discovered only in the incoherent beam. FRB 20200915A (also discovered only in the incoherent beam) shows speckled emission in the dynamic spectrum which cannot be explained by interstellar scintillation in our Galaxy or plasma lensing, and might be intrinsic to the source. FRB 20201123A shows a faint post-cursor burst about…
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