A pulsar-like swing in the polarisation position angle of a nearby fast radio burst
Ryan Mckinven, Mohit Bhardwaj, Tarraneh Eftekhari, Charles D., Kilpatrick, Aida Kirichenko, Arpan Pal, Amanda M. Cook, B. M. Gaensler,, Utkarsh Giri, Victoria M. Kaspi, Daniele Michilli, Kenzie Nimmo, Aaron B., Pearlman, Ziggy Pleunis, Ketan R. Sand, Ingrid Stairs

TL;DR
This paper reports a fast radio burst with a pulsar-like polarisation angle swing, suggesting a magnetospheric origin near the neutron star, and uses the rotating vector model to analyze its emission geometry.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed polarization angle evolution of a non-repeating FRB consistent with the rotating vector model, indicating a magnetospheric emission origin.
Findings
PA rotation of ~130 degrees over 2.5 ms observed
RVM fits suggest magnetospheric emission close to the source
Constraints on progenitor models exclude extremely short-period pulsars
Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) last for milliseconds and arrive at Earth from cosmological distances. While their origin(s) and emission mechanism(s) are presently unknown, their signals bear similarities with the much less luminous radio emission generated by pulsars within our Galaxy and several lines of evidence point toward neutron star origins. For pulsars, the linear polarisation position angle (PA) often exhibits evolution over the pulse phase that is interpreted within a geometric framework known as the rotating vector model (RVM). Here, we report on a fast radio burst, FRB 20221022A, detected by the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) and localized to a nearby host galaxy (), MCG+14-02-011. This one-off FRB displays a degree rotation of its PA over its burst duration, closely resembling the "S"-shaped PA evolution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
