The unseen host galaxy and high dispersion measure of a precisely-localised Fast Radio Burst suggests a high-redshift origin
Lachlan Marnoch (1, 2, 3, 4), Stuart D. Ryder (1, 3), Clancy W., James (5), Alexa C. Gordon (6), Mawson W. Sammons (5), J. Xavier Prochaska, (7, 8, 9), Nicolas Tejos (10) Adam T. Deller (11), Danica R. Scott (5),, Shivani Bhandari (2, 12, 13, 14), Marcin Glowacki (5)

TL;DR
This paper investigates a precisely-localised fast radio burst with no detected host galaxy, suggesting it may originate from a high-redshift or dimmer host, impacting our understanding of FRB origins and their use in cosmology.
Contribution
It presents the first case of a localized FRB without an identifiable host galaxy, exploring possible high-redshift or dim host scenarios and their implications.
Findings
No host galaxy detected despite deep imaging.
The burst's high dispersion measure suggests a redshift greater than 1.
Possible explanations include a distant, dim host or a hostless origin.
Abstract
FRB 20210912A is a fast radio burst (FRB), detected and localised to sub-arcsecond precision by the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder. No host galaxy has been identified for this burst despite the high precision of its localisation and deep optical and infrared follow-up, to 5- limits of mag and mag with the Very Large Telescope. The combination of precise radio localisation and deep optical imaging has almost always resulted in the secure identification of a host galaxy, and this is the first case in which the line-of-sight is not obscured by the Galactic disk. The dispersion measure of this burst, , allows for a large source redshift of according to the Macquart relation. It could thus be that the host galaxy is consistent with the known population of FRB hosts, but…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStatistical and numerical algorithms · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
