MeerKAT discovery of a hyperactive repeating fast radio burst source
J. Tian, I. Pastor-Marazuela, K. M. Rajwade, B. W. Stappers, K. Shaji, K. Y. Hanmer, M. Caleb, M. C. Bezuidenhout, F. Jankowski, R. Breton, E. D. Barr, M. Kramer, P. J. Groot, S. Bloemen, P. Vreeswijk, D. Pieterse, P. A. Woudt, R. P. Fender, R. A. D. Wijnands, D. A. H. Buckley

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of a highly active repeating fast radio burst source using MeerKAT, revealing its burst properties, spectral behavior, polarization, and lack of optical counterpart, advancing understanding of FRB mechanisms.
Contribution
First detection and localization of a highly active repeating FRB source with extensive multi-band follow-up and polarization analysis using MeerKAT.
Findings
Detected 249 bursts from the source, exhibiting band-limited emission.
Found a power-law burst rate with spectral turnover across frequencies.
Most bursts show near 100% linear polarization with some circular polarization.
Abstract
We present the discovery and localisation of a repeating fast radio burst (FRB) source from the MeerTRAP project, a commensal fast radio transient search programme using the MeerKAT telescope. FRB 20240619D was first discovered on 2024 June 19 with three bursts being detected within two minutes in the MeerKAT L-band (856 - 1712MHz). We conducted follow-up observations of FRB 20240619D with MeerKAT using the Ultra-High Frequency (UHF; 544 - 1088MHz), L-band and S-band (1968 - 2843MHz) receivers one week after its discovery, and recorded a total of 249 bursts. The MeerKAT-detected bursts exhibit band-limited emission with an average fractional bandwidth of 0.31, 0.34 and 0.48 in the UHF, L-band and S-band, respectively. We find our observations are complete down to a fluence limit of ~1Jy ms, above which the cumulative burst rate follows a power law $R (>F)\propto…
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.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
