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arXiv:1907.06619 [astro-ph.HE]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

The prevalence of repeating fast radio bursts

Vikram Ravi

Published 2019-07-15Version 1

Fast radio bursts are extragalactic, sub-millisecond radio impulses of unknown origin [1,2]. Their dispersion measures, which quantify the observed frequency-dependent dispersive delays in terms of free-electron column densities, significantly exceed predictions from models [3] of the Milky Way interstellar medium. The excess dispersions are likely accrued as fast radio bursts propagate through their host galaxies, gaseous galactic halos and the intergalactic medium [4,5]. Despite extensive follow-up observations of the published sample of 72 burst sources [6], only two are observed to repeat [7,8], and it is unknown whether or not the remainder are truly one-off events. Here I show that the volumetric occurrence rate of so far non-repeating fast radio bursts likely exceeds the rates of candidate cataclysmic progenitor events, and also likely exceeds the birth rates of candidate compact-object sources. This analysis is based on the high detection rate of bursts with low dispersion measures by the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment [9]. Within the existing suite of astrophysical scenarios for fast radio burst progenitors, I conclude that most observed cases originate from sources that emit several bursts over their lifetimes.

Comments: Submitted version of article published online by Nature Astronomy (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-019-0831-y). 12 pages, 4 figures
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