The BINGO Project IX: Search for Fast Radio Bursts -- A Forecast for the BINGO Interferometry System
Marcelo V. dos Santos, Ricardo G. Landim, Gabriel A. Hoerning, Filipe, B. Abdalla, Amilcar Queiroz, Elcio Abdalla, Carlos A. Wuensche, Bin Wang,, Luciano Barosi, Thyrso Villela, Alessandro Marins, Chang Feng, Edmar Gurjao,, Camila P. Novaes, Larissa C. O. Santos

TL;DR
This paper forecasts the capabilities of the BINGO interferometry system to detect and localize Fast Radio Bursts, proposing configurations and a new software tool to evaluate detection rates and localization precision.
Contribution
It introduces a novel BINGO interferometry system with auxiliary telescopes and a Python package for simulating FRB detection and localization performance.
Findings
BIS can localize approximately 23 FRBs annually in optimal configurations.
Wider beams increase the number of baselines observing an FRB, aiding localization.
The system can observe hundreds of FRBs during Phase 1, with many well localized.
Abstract
The Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO) from Integrated Neutral Gas Observations (BINGO) radio telescope will use the neutral Hydrogen emission line to map the Universe in the redshift range , with the main goal of probing BAO. In addition, the instrument optical design and hardware configuration support the search for Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs). In this work, we propose the use of a BINGO Interferometry System (BIS) including new auxiliary, smaller, radio telescopes (hereafter \emph{outriggers}). The interferometric approach makes it possible to pinpoint the FRB sources in the sky. We present here the results of several BIS configurations combining BINGO horns with and without mirrors ( m, m, and m) and 5, 7, 9, or 10 for single horns. We developed a new {\tt Python} package, the {\tt FRBlip}, which generates synthetic FRB mock catalogs and computes,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
