Ninety percent circular polarization detected in a repeating fast radio burst
J. C. Jiang, J. W. Xu, J. R. Niu, K. J. Lee, W. W. Zhu, B. Zhang, Y., Qu, H. Xu, D. J. Zhou, S. S. Cao, W. Y. Wang, B. J. Wang, S. Cao, Y. K., Zhang, C. F. Zhang, H. Q. Gan, J. L. Han, L. F. Hao, Y. X. Huang, P. Jiang,, D. Z. Li, H. Li, Y. Li, Z. X. Li, R. Luo, Y. P. Men

TL;DR
This paper reports the unprecedented detection of 90.9% circular polarization in a repeating fast radio burst, challenging existing theories and providing new insights into the emission mechanisms of FRBs.
Contribution
It presents the first observation of such high circular polarization in an FRB, suggesting complex magnetospheric and propagation effects influence the emission.
Findings
Detected 90.9% circular polarization in FRB 20201124A
Observed rapid swings and orthogonal jumps in linear polarization
High circular polarization challenges existing emission models
Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are extra-galactic sources with unknown physical mechanisms. They emit millisecond-duration radio pulses with isotropic equivalent energy of ergs. This corresponds to a brightness temperature of FRB emission typically reaching the level of K, but can be as high as above K for sub-microsecond timescale structures, suggesting the presence of underlying coherent relativistic radiation mechanisms. Polarization carries the key information to understand the physical origin of FRBs, with linear polarization usually tracing the geometric configuration of magnetic fields and circular polarization probing both intrinsic radiation mechanisms and propagation effects. Here we show that the repeating sources FRB 20201124A emits circularly polarized radio pulses. Such a high degree of circular polarization was unexpected…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
