A Heavily Scattered Fast Radio Burst Is Viewed Through Multiple Galaxy Halos
Jakob T. Faber, Vikram Ravi, Stella Koch Ocker, Myles B. Sherman,, Kritti Sharma, Liam Connor, Casey Law, Nikita Kosogorov, Gregg Hallinan,, Charlie Harnach, Greg Hellbourg, Rick Hobbs, David Hodge, Mark Hodges, James, W. Lamb, Paul Rasmussen, Jean J. Somalwar, Sander Weinreb

TL;DR
This study analyzes a heavily scattered fast radio burst (FRB 20221219A) through multiple galaxy halos, revealing that intervening circumgalactic structures, rather than the host galaxy, likely cause the observed scattering effects.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of a heavily scattered FRB, highlighting the role of intervening galaxy halos and circumgalactic medium in FRB scattering, beyond the host galaxy's influence.
Findings
Intervening galaxy halos significantly contribute to FRB scattering.
Host galaxy does not dominate the observed scattering in this case.
A single ionized cloudlet in a galaxy's circumgalactic medium can explain the scattering.
Abstract
We present a multi-wavelength study of the apparently non-repeating, heavily scattered fast radio burst, FRB 20221219A, detected by the Deep Synoptic Array 110 (DSA-110). The burst exhibits a moderate dispersion measure (DM) of and an unusually high scattering timescale of ms at 1.4 GHz. We associate the FRB with a Milky Way-like host galaxy at of stellar mass . We identify two intervening galaxy halos at redshifts and , with low impact parameters, kpc and kpc, and intermediate stellar masses, $\mathrm{log}_{10}(M_{\star, \mathrm{igh1}}) =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
