An investigation into correlations between FRB and host galaxy properties
M. Glowacki, A. Bera, C. W. James, J. Paterson, A. T. Deller, A C. Gordon, L. Marnoch, A. R. Muller, J. X. Prochaska, S. D. Ryder, R. M. Shannon, N. Tejos, A. G. Mannings

TL;DR
This study explores how properties of host galaxies relate to FRB signals, finding correlations with galaxy mass, age, and metallicity, which suggest the host environment influences FRB propagation effects.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of correlations between FRB propagation signatures and host galaxy properties, testing the assumption that scattering occurs mainly within host galaxies.
Findings
Correlations found between scattering timescale and host galaxy properties like stellar surface density and age.
No correlation observed between host galaxy inclination and FRB scattering, suggesting minimal inclination bias.
A significant correlation between host galaxy axis ratio and Faraday rotation measure indicates orientation effects on FRB signals.
Abstract
Impulsive radio signals such as fast radio bursts (FRBs) are imprinted with the signatures of multi-path propagation through ionised media in the form of frequency-dependent temporal broadening of the pulse profile (scattering). The dominant source of scattering for most FRBs is expected to be within their host galaxies, an assumption which can be tested by examining potential correlations between properties of the FRBs and global properties of their hosts. Using results from the CRAFT survey, we investigate correlations across a range of host galaxy properties against attributes of the FRB that encode propagation effects: scattering timescale tau, polarisation fractions, and absolute Faraday rotation measure. From 21 host galaxy properties considered, we find three correlated with tau, including the stellar surface density (or compactness; Pearson p-value p = 0.002 and Spearman p =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
