Propagation effects at low frequencies seen in the LOFAR long-term monitoring of the periodically active FRB 20180916B
A. Gopinath, C. G. Bassa, Z. Pleunis, J. W. T. Hessels, P. Chawla, E., F. Keane, V. Kondratiev, D. Michilli, K. Nimmo

TL;DR
This study presents low-frequency observations of FRB 20180916B with LOFAR, revealing propagation effects, activity cycle constraints, and polarization properties, which enhance understanding of the burst environment and periodic activity mechanisms.
Contribution
First low-frequency monitoring of FRB 20180916B with detailed analysis of propagation effects, activity cycle, and polarization, providing new constraints on its local environment and activity mechanisms.
Findings
Detected 11 new bursts at 110-188 MHz
Constrained activity window to 4.3 days and phase center to 0.67
Observed significant RM variations with >50% change
Abstract
LOFAR (LOw Frequency ARray) has previously detected bursts from the periodically active, repeating fast radio burst (FRB) source FRB 20180916B down to unprecedentedly low radio frequencies of 110 MHz. Here we present 11 new bursts in 223 more hours of continued monitoring of FRB 20180916B in the 110-188 MHz band with LOFAR. We place new constraints on the source's activity window day, and phase centre in its 16.33-day activity cycle, strengthening the evidence for its frequency-dependent activity cycle. Propagation effects like Faraday rotation and scattering are especially pronounced at low frequencies and constrain properties of FRB 20180916B's local environment. We track variations in scattering and time-frequency drift rates, and find no evidence for trends in time or activity phase. Faraday rotation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · GNSS positioning and interference · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
