A repeating fast radio burst source in the outskirts of a quiescent galaxy
V. Shah, K. Shin, C. Leung, W. Fong, T. Eftekhari, M. Amiri, B. C., Andersen, S. Andrew, M. Bhardwaj, C. Brar, T. Cassanelli, S. Chatterjee, A., P. Curtin, M. Dobbs, Y. Dong, F. A. Dong, E. Fonseca, B. M. Gaensler, M., Halpern, J. W. T. Hessels, A. L. Ibik, N. Jain, R. C. Joseph

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and precise localization of a repeating fast radio burst (FRB) in the outskirts of a quiescent galaxy, suggesting a possible globular cluster origin and a delayed formation channel for its progenitor.
Contribution
The study presents the first localization of an FRB in the outskirts of a quiescent galaxy, with detailed analysis supporting a globular cluster progenitor scenario.
Findings
FRB 20240209A is localized to the outskirts of a luminous galaxy.
The FRB has the largest host galaxy offset to date among known FRBs.
The data suggest a globular cluster origin for the FRB progenitor.
Abstract
We report the discovery of the repeating fast radio burst source FRB 20240209A using the CHIME/FRB telescope. We have detected 22 bursts from this repeater between February and July 2024, six of which were also recorded at the Outrigger station KKO. The 66-km long CHIME-KKO baseline can provide single-pulse FRB localizations along one dimension with accuracy. The high declination of 86 degrees for this repeater allowed its detection with a rotating range of baseline vectors, enabling the combined localization region size to be constrained to . We present deep Gemini observations that, combined with the FRB localization, enabled a robust association of FRB 20240209A to the outskirts of a luminous galaxy (P(O|x) = 0.99; ). FRB 20240209A has a projected physical offset of …
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Statistical and numerical algorithms
