Long term monitoring of FRB~20121102 with the Nan\c{c}ay Radio Telescope and multi-wavelength campaigns including INTEGRAL
C. Gouiff\'es, C. Ng, I. Cognard, M. Dennefeld, N. Devaney, V.S. Dhillon, J. Guilet, P. Laurent, E. Le Floc'h, A. J. Maury, K. Nimmo, A. Shearer, L. G. Spitler, P. Zarka, S. Corbel

TL;DR
This study conducted long-term multi-wavelength observations of the active FRB20121102 source using the Nançay Radio Telescope, INTEGRAL, and other facilities to search for high-energy counterparts and better understand its burst properties.
Contribution
It provides the first simultaneous radio and high-energy limits for FRB20121102, and refines the source's active window period with extensive observational data.
Findings
No high-energy counterparts detected during campaigns.
Established upper limits for optical and X-ray emissions.
Updated the active window period to 154±2 days.
Abstract
The origin(s) of Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs), mysterious radio bursts coming from extragalactic distances, remains unknown. Multi-wavelength observations are arguably the only way to answer this question unambiguously. We attempt to detect hard X-ray/soft gamma-ray counterparts to one of the most active FRB sources, FRB20121102, as well as improve understanding of burst properties in radio through a long-term monitoring campaign using the Nan\c{c}ay Radio Telescope (NRT). Multi-wavelength campaigns involving the International Gamma-ray Astrophysics Laboratory (INTEGRAL) satellite, the Nan\c{c}ay Radio Observatory, the optical telescopes at the Observatoire de Haute Provence as well as Arecibo were conducted between 2017 and 2019. In 2017, the telescopes were scheduled to observe simultaneously between Sept 24-29. We specifically used the Fast Response Enhanced CCDs for the optical…
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