Mapping Obscured Star Formation in the Host Galaxy of FRB 20201124A
Yuxin Dong (Northwestern/CIERA), Tarraneh Eftekhari, Wen-fai Fong,, Adam T. Deller, Alexandra G. Mannings, Sunil Simha, Navin Sridhar, Marc, Rafelski, Alexa C. Gordon, Shivani Bhandari, Cherie K. Day, Kasper E. Heintz,, Jason W.T. Hessels, Joel Leja, Clancy W. James

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution radio and optical observations to map dust-obscured star formation in the host galaxy of the active repeating FRB 20201124A, revealing significant obscured star formation near the FRB location.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed mapping of obscured star formation in an FRB host galaxy and constrains the possible origins of the FRB progenitor.
Findings
Host galaxy has the most significantly obscured star formation among known FRB hosts.
FRB is offset from galaxy's bar or spiral arms but coincides with radio emission extending to its location.
Deep limits on persistent radio source luminosity are consistent with magnetar models.
Abstract
We present high-resolution 1.5 6 GHz Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) optical and infrared observations of the extremely active repeating fast radio burst (FRB) FRB 20201124A and its barred spiral host galaxy. We constrain the location and morphology of star formation in the host and search for a persistent radio source (PRS) coincident with FRB 20201124A. We resolve the morphology of the radio emission across all frequency bands and measure a star formation rate SFR yr, approximately times larger than optically-inferred SFRs, demonstrating dust-obscured star formation throughout the host. Compared to a sample of all known FRB hosts with radio emission, the host of FRB 20201124A has the most significantly obscured star formation. While HST observations show the FRB to be offset from the bar or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
