Probing the maximum energy of fast radio bursts using thousands of sources from the Second CHIME/FRB Catalog
Vishwangi Shah, Jason W. T. Hessels, Victoria M. Kaspi, Kiyoshi W. Masui, Mawson W. Sammons, Daniel Amouyal, Charanjot Brar, Shami Chatterjee, Alice P. Curtin, Hannah Didehbani, B. M. Gaensler, Naman Jain, Ronniy C. Joseph, Afrokk Khan, Bikash Kharel, Adam E. Lanman

TL;DR
This study uses a large sample of nearly 3,000 FRBs from the CHIME catalog to establish a lower limit on their maximum energy, supporting magnetars as likely progenitors and constraining emission models.
Contribution
It introduces a framework to estimate the maximum FRB energy limit using dispersion measures and fluences, accounting for outliers and host galaxy effects, with results consistent across different samples.
Findings
Lower limit on FRB energy range: 1.2×10^41 to 1.9×10^42 erg
Energy distribution of FRBs capped around 10^42 erg
Supports magnetar energy reservoir as FRB source
Abstract
Quantifying the maximum energy of fast radio bursts (FRBs) can provide stringent constraints on their emission mechanisms and progenitor models. However, the most energetic bursts are rare, requiring a large sample of FRBs to detect them. In this work, we use the largest available such sample, 2,998 one-off FRBs from the Second CHIME/FRB Catalog, to obtain a lower limit on the maximum energy () of FRBs, assuming isotropic energy distribution from FRB sources. In the absence of known redshifts () for most sources, we present a framework that uses the dispersion measures (DMs) and fluences of these FRBs, together with the probability distribution of given DM, to derive the lower limit on . We generate simulated FRB samples assuming different parameter values for a log-normal distribution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
