The Massive and Quiescent Elliptical Host Galaxy of the Repeating Fast Radio Burst FRB20240209A
T. Eftekhari, Y. Dong, W. Fong, V. Shah, S. Simha, B. C. Andersen, S., Andrew, M. Bhardwaj, T. Cassanelli, S. Chatterjee, D. A. Coulter, E. Fonseca,, B. M. Gaensler, A. C. Gordon, J. W. T. Hessels, A. L. Ibik, R. C. Joseph, L., A. Kahinga, V. Kaspi, B. Kharel, C. D. Kilpatrick

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a repeating FRB hosted by a massive, old, and quiescent elliptical galaxy, providing new insights into the diverse environments and potential progenitors of FRBs.
Contribution
It presents the first confirmed elliptical host galaxy for an FRB and characterizes its properties, suggesting diverse progenitor scenarios beyond star-forming environments.
Findings
Host galaxy is elliptical, quiescent, and the most massive FRB host to date.
The FRB host has an old stellar population (~11 Gyr) and low star formation rate.
The findings imply multiple progenitor channels for FRBs, including mergers and accretion processes.
Abstract
The discovery and localization of FRB20240209A by the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Fast Radio Burst (CHIME/FRB) experiment marks the first repeating FRB localized with the CHIME/FRB Outriggers and adds to the small sample of repeating FRBs with associated host galaxies. Here we present Keck and Gemini observations of the host that reveal a redshift . We perform stellar population modeling to jointly fit the optical through mid-infrared data of the host and infer a median stellar mass log and a mass-weighted stellar population age Gyr, corresponding to the most massive and oldest FRB host discovered to date. Coupled with a star formation rate , the specific star formation rate classifies the host as quiescent. Through surface brightness profile modeling, we…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
