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Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase

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Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase. / Laha, Sibasish; Younes, George; Wadiasingh, Zorawar et al.
In: The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 930, No. 2, 172, 17.05.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Laha, S, Younes, G, Wadiasingh, Z, Wang, B-J, Lee, K-J, Klingler, N, Zhang, B, Xu, H, Zhang, C-F, Zhu, W-W, Ghosh, R, Lien, A, Troja, E, Cenko, SB, Oates, S, Nicholl, M, Becerra, JG, Meyer, E & Parsotan, T 2022, 'Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase', The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 930, no. 2, 172. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac63a8

APA

Laha, S., Younes, G., Wadiasingh, Z., Wang, B.-J., Lee, K.-J., Klingler, N., Zhang, B., Xu, H., Zhang, C.-F., Zhu, W.-W., Ghosh, R., Lien, A., Troja, E., Cenko, S. B., Oates, S., Nicholl, M., Becerra, J. G., Meyer, E., & Parsotan, T. (2022). Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase. The Astrophysical Journal, 930(2), Article 172. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac63a8

Vancouver

Laha S, Younes G, Wadiasingh Z, Wang BJ, Lee KJ, Klingler N et al. Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase. The Astrophysical Journal. 2022 May 17;930(2):172. doi: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac63a8

Author

Laha, Sibasish ; Younes, George ; Wadiasingh, Zorawar et al. / Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase. In: The Astrophysical Journal. 2022 ; Vol. 930, No. 2.

Bibtex

@article{754e6f365279490488624327d1178ac9,
title = "Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase",
abstract = "FRB 180301 is one of the most actively repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) that has shown polarization angle changes in its radio burst emission, an indication for their likely origin in the magnetosphere of a highly magnetized neutron star. We carried out a multiwavelength campaign with the FAST radio telescope and NICER X-ray observatory to investigate any possible X-ray emission temporally coincident with the bright radio bursts. The observations took place on 2021 March 4, 9 and 19. We detected five bright radio bursts with FAST, four of which were strictly simultaneous with the NICER observations. The peak flux density of the radio bursts ranged between 28 and 105 mJy, the burst fluence between 27 and 170 mJy ms, and the burst durations between 1.7 and 12.3 ms. The radio bursts from FRB 180301 exhibited a complex time domain structure, and subpulses were detected in individual bursts, with no significant circular polarization. The linear degree of polarization in the L band reduced significantly compared to the 2019 observations. We do not detect any X-ray emission in excess of the background during the 5, 10, 100 ms, 1 and 100 s time intervals at/around the radio-burst barycenter-corrected arrival times, at a > 5σ confidence level. The 5σ upper limits on the X-ray (a) persistent flux is <7.64 × 10-12 erg cm-2 s-1, equivalent to L X < 2.50 × 1045 erg s-1 and (b) 5 ms fluence is <2 × 10-11 erg cm-2, at the radio burst regions. Using the 5 ms X-ray fluence upper limit, we can estimate the radio efficiency η R/X L radio/L X-ray ≳ 10-8. The derived lower limit on η R/X is consistent with both magnetospheric models and synchrotron maser models involving relativistic shocks.",
author = "Sibasish Laha and George Younes and Zorawar Wadiasingh and Bo-Jun Wang and Ke-Jia Lee and Noel Klingler and Bing Zhang and Heng Xu and Chin-Feng Zhang and Wei-Wei Zhu and Ritesh Ghosh and Amy Lien and Eleonora Troja and Cenko, {S. Bradley} and Samantha Oates and Matt Nicholl and Becerra, {Josefa G.} and Eileen Meyer and Tyler Parsotan",
year = "2022",
month = may,
day = "17",
doi = "10.3847/1538-4357/ac63a8",
language = "English",
volume = "930",
journal = "The Astrophysical Journal",
issn = "0004-637X",
publisher = "Institute of Physics Publishing",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Simultaneous View of FRB 180301 with FAST and NICER during a Bursting Phase

AU - Laha, Sibasish

AU - Younes, George

AU - Wadiasingh, Zorawar

AU - Wang, Bo-Jun

AU - Lee, Ke-Jia

AU - Klingler, Noel

AU - Zhang, Bing

AU - Xu, Heng

AU - Zhang, Chin-Feng

AU - Zhu, Wei-Wei

AU - Ghosh, Ritesh

AU - Lien, Amy

AU - Troja, Eleonora

AU - Cenko, S. Bradley

AU - Oates, Samantha

AU - Nicholl, Matt

AU - Becerra, Josefa G.

AU - Meyer, Eileen

AU - Parsotan, Tyler

PY - 2022/5/17

Y1 - 2022/5/17

N2 - FRB 180301 is one of the most actively repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) that has shown polarization angle changes in its radio burst emission, an indication for their likely origin in the magnetosphere of a highly magnetized neutron star. We carried out a multiwavelength campaign with the FAST radio telescope and NICER X-ray observatory to investigate any possible X-ray emission temporally coincident with the bright radio bursts. The observations took place on 2021 March 4, 9 and 19. We detected five bright radio bursts with FAST, four of which were strictly simultaneous with the NICER observations. The peak flux density of the radio bursts ranged between 28 and 105 mJy, the burst fluence between 27 and 170 mJy ms, and the burst durations between 1.7 and 12.3 ms. The radio bursts from FRB 180301 exhibited a complex time domain structure, and subpulses were detected in individual bursts, with no significant circular polarization. The linear degree of polarization in the L band reduced significantly compared to the 2019 observations. We do not detect any X-ray emission in excess of the background during the 5, 10, 100 ms, 1 and 100 s time intervals at/around the radio-burst barycenter-corrected arrival times, at a > 5σ confidence level. The 5σ upper limits on the X-ray (a) persistent flux is <7.64 × 10-12 erg cm-2 s-1, equivalent to L X < 2.50 × 1045 erg s-1 and (b) 5 ms fluence is <2 × 10-11 erg cm-2, at the radio burst regions. Using the 5 ms X-ray fluence upper limit, we can estimate the radio efficiency η R/X L radio/L X-ray ≳ 10-8. The derived lower limit on η R/X is consistent with both magnetospheric models and synchrotron maser models involving relativistic shocks.

AB - FRB 180301 is one of the most actively repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) that has shown polarization angle changes in its radio burst emission, an indication for their likely origin in the magnetosphere of a highly magnetized neutron star. We carried out a multiwavelength campaign with the FAST radio telescope and NICER X-ray observatory to investigate any possible X-ray emission temporally coincident with the bright radio bursts. The observations took place on 2021 March 4, 9 and 19. We detected five bright radio bursts with FAST, four of which were strictly simultaneous with the NICER observations. The peak flux density of the radio bursts ranged between 28 and 105 mJy, the burst fluence between 27 and 170 mJy ms, and the burst durations between 1.7 and 12.3 ms. The radio bursts from FRB 180301 exhibited a complex time domain structure, and subpulses were detected in individual bursts, with no significant circular polarization. The linear degree of polarization in the L band reduced significantly compared to the 2019 observations. We do not detect any X-ray emission in excess of the background during the 5, 10, 100 ms, 1 and 100 s time intervals at/around the radio-burst barycenter-corrected arrival times, at a > 5σ confidence level. The 5σ upper limits on the X-ray (a) persistent flux is <7.64 × 10-12 erg cm-2 s-1, equivalent to L X < 2.50 × 1045 erg s-1 and (b) 5 ms fluence is <2 × 10-11 erg cm-2, at the radio burst regions. Using the 5 ms X-ray fluence upper limit, we can estimate the radio efficiency η R/X L radio/L X-ray ≳ 10-8. The derived lower limit on η R/X is consistent with both magnetospheric models and synchrotron maser models involving relativistic shocks.

U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/ac63a8

DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/ac63a8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 930

JO - The Astrophysical Journal

JF - The Astrophysical Journal

SN - 0004-637X

IS - 2

M1 - 172

ER -