Investigating FRB 20240114A with FAST: Morphological Classification and Drifting Rate Measurements in a Burst-Cluster Framework
Long-Xuan Zhang, Shiyan Tian, Junyi Shen, Jun-Shuo Zhang, Dejiang Zhou, Lin Zhou, Po Ma, Tian-Cong Wang, Dengke Zhou, Jinlin Han, Yunpeng Men, Fayin Wang, Jiarui Niu, Pei Wang, Weiwei Zhu, Bing Zhang, Di Li, Yuan-Chuan Zou, Wei-Yang Wang, Yuan-Pei Yang, Qin Wu, He Gao

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the morphological classification and drifting rates of FRB 20240114A using FAST, revealing diverse drifting behaviors, their statistical properties, and potential physical mechanisms behind the observed burst patterns.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed classification framework for burst-clusters, quantifies drifting behaviors, and compares physical properties, advancing understanding of FRB emission mechanisms.
Findings
23.82% of burst-clusters show upward drifting.
Drifting rate increases with peak frequency.
Upward drifting burst-clusters have shorter widths and longer intervals.
Abstract
This study investigates the morphological classification and drifting rate measurement of the repeating fast radio burst (FRB) source FRB 20240114A using the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST). Detected on January 14, 2024, FRB 20240114A exhibited an exceptionally high burst rate, revealing unique properties. Through observational campaigns over several months, we selected a dataset comprising 3,203 bursts (2,109 burst-clusters) during a continuous monitoring session (15,780 seconds) on March 12, 2024. Improving upon previous work, we clarify the definitions of sub-bursts, bursts and burst-clusters. Using an average dispersion measures (DM) of 529.2 pc cm, we classified the burst-clusters into Downward Drifting, Upward Drifting, No Drifting, No Evidence for Drifting, Not-Clear, and Complex burst-clusters. Among the 978 burst-clusters that exhibit drifting…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · earthquake and tectonic studies
