A fast radio burst localized at detection to an edge-on galaxy using very-long-baseline interferometry
Tomas Cassanelli, Calvin Leung, Pranav Sanghavi, Juan Mena-Parra,, Savannah Cary, Ryan Mckinven, Mohit Bhardwaj, Kiyoshi W. Masui, Daniele, Michilli, Kevin Bandura, Shami Chatterjee, Jeffrey B. Peterson, Jane, Kaczmarek, Chitrang Patel, Mubdi Rahman, Kaitlyn Shin

TL;DR
This paper reports the first VLBI localization of an FRB at detection time, pinpointing it to an edge-on galaxy and providing insights into its environment and potential progenitor models.
Contribution
It demonstrates real-time VLBI localization of an FRB to its host galaxy using data collected only at detection, a novel achievement in the field.
Findings
FRB localized to an edge-on galaxy at z≈0.177
Host galaxy shows recent star formation near the burst
Progenitor environment consistent with galactic disk
Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration, luminous radio transients of extragalactic origin. These events have been used to trace the baryonic structure of the Universe using their dispersion measure (DM) assuming that the contribution from host galaxies can be reliably estimated. However, contributions from the immediate environment of an FRB may dominate the observed DM, thus making redshift estimates challenging without a robust host galaxy association. Furthermore, while at least one Galactic burst has been associated with a magnetar, other localized FRBs argue against magnetars as the sole progenitor model. Precise localization within the host galaxy can discriminate between progenitor models, a major goal of the field. Until now, localizations on this spatial scale have only been carried out in follow-up observations of repeating sources. Here we demonstrate the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · GNSS positioning and interference
