James Webb Space Telescope Observations of the Nearby and Precisely-Localized FRB 20250316A: A Potential Near-IR Counterpart and Implications for the Progenitors of Fast Radio Bursts
Peter K. Blanchard, Edo Berger, Shion E. Andrew, Aswin Suresh, Kohki Uno, Charles D. Kilpatrick, Brian D. Metzger, Harsh Kumar, Navin Sridhar, Amanda M. Cook, Yuxin Dong, Tarraneh Eftekhari, Wen-fai Fong, Walter W. Golay, Daichi Hiramatsu, Ronniy C. Joseph, Victoria M. Kaspi

TL;DR
This study uses JWST near-infrared imaging to identify a potential counterpart to FRB 20250316A, suggesting a possible link to a neutron star or magnetar formed from massive star core collapse.
Contribution
First deep near-infrared imaging of FRB 20250316A's precise location, identifying a faint source that constrains possible progenitors and environment.
Findings
Detected a faint NIR source near FRB localization.
Source is inconsistent with being a globular cluster or supernova remnant.
Stellar population analysis suggests a link to massive star progenitors.
Abstract
We present deep James Webb Space Telescope near-infrared imaging to search for a quiescent or transient counterpart to FRB 20250316A, which was precisely localized with the CHIME/FRB Outriggers array to an area of pc in the outer regions of NGC 4141 at Mpc. Our F150W2 image reveals a faint source near the center of the FRB localization region ("NIR-1"; mag; probability of chance coincidence ), the only source within . We find that it is too faint to be a globular cluster, young star cluster, red supergiant star, or a giant star near the tip of the red giant branch (RGB). It is instead consistent with a red giant near the RGB "clump" or a massive ( M) main sequence star, although the latter explanation is less likely. The source is too bright to be a supernova remnant, Crab-like…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
