Searching for links between energetic millisecond pulsars and repeating fast radio bursts
R. J. van Ruiten, J. W. T. Hessels, S. Bhandari, P. Chawla, A. Gopinath, D. M. Hewitt, K. Nimmo, M. P. Snelders

TL;DR
This study compares the burst characteristics of a Galactic millisecond pulsar with a repeating fast radio burst to explore potential links, finding some similarities but no definitive connection.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of pulsar giant pulses and FRB bursts, highlighting differences and similarities to evaluate possible associations.
Findings
M28A's GPs have broad spectra from 700-4000 MHz with complex peaks.
Known GP characteristics like duration and luminosity are consistent across the bandwidth.
No strong link found between M28A and FRB 20200120E, but rare MSP-like FRBs cannot be ruled out.
Abstract
The unexpected localization of the repeating FRB 20200120E to a globular cluster challenges conventional FRB models based on magnetars formed via core collapse. One alternative model suggests that FRB 20200120E is a millisecond pulsar (MSP) producing giant pulses (GPs). To test this hypothesis, we compared the characteristics of FRB 20200120E bursts with the GPs of the most energetic Galactic MSP known, M28A (PSR B182124A), using observations with the Parkes (Murriyang) telescope's Ultra Wideband Low-frequency (UWL) receiver. Our analysis provides insight into the spectral structure and frequency extent of M28A's GPs, revealing broad-band spectra spanning MHz (in some cases) with complex spectral peaks. We find that known M28A GP characteristics persist at this bandwidth, such as durations, luminosities, periodicity, wait-time, and energy distribution. A sub-band search…
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