A subarcsec localized fast radio burst with a significant host galaxy dispersion measure contribution

Caleb, M.; Driessen, L. N.; Gordon, A. C.; Tejos, N.; Bernales, L.; Qiu, H.; Chibueze, J. O.; Stappers, B. W.; Rajwade, K. M.; Cavallaro, F.; Wang, Y.; Kumar, P.; Majid, W. A.; Wharton, R. S.; Naudet, C. J.; Bezuidenhout, M. C.; Jankowski, F.; Malenta, M.

Keywords: stars: neutron, radio continuum: transients, Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena

Abstract

We present the discovery of FRB 20210410D with the MeerKAT radio interferometer in South Africa, as part of the MeerTRAP commensal project. FRB 20210410D has a dispersion measure DM = 578.78 ± 2 pccm−3 and was localized to subarcsec precision in the 2 s images made from the correlation data products. The localization enabled the association of the FRB with an optical galaxy at z = 0.1415, which when combined with the DM places it above the 3σ scatter of the Macquart relation. We attribute the excess DM to the host galaxy after accounting for contributions from the Milky Way's interstellar medium and halo, and the combined effects of the intergalactic medium and intervening galaxies. This is the first FRB that is not associated with a dwarf galaxy to exhibit a likely large host galaxy DM contribution. We do not detect any continuum radio emission at the FRB position or from the host galaxy down to a 3σ rms of 14.4 μJy beam-1. The FRB has a scattering delay of 29.4+2.8−2.7 ms at 1 GHz, and exhibits candidate subpulses in the spectrum, which hint at the possibility of it being a repeating FRB. Although not constraining, we note that this FRB has not been seen to repeat in 7.28 h at 1.3 GHz with MeerKAT, 3 h at 2.4 GHz with Murriyang, and 5.7 h at simultaneous 2.3 GHz and 8.4 GHz observations with the Deep Space Network. We encourage further follow-up to establish a possible repeating nature.

Más información

Título de la Revista: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volumen: 524
Número: 2
Editorial: Oxford Academic
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Página de inicio: 2064
Página final: 2077
URL: https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/link_gateway/2023MNRAS.524.2064C/PUB_HTML