Author
Listed:
- R. M. Shannon
(Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn
ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav)
Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy, Curtin University
Australia Telescope National Facility)
- J.-P. Macquart
(Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy, Curtin University
ARC Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO))
- K. W. Bannister
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- R. D. Ekers
(Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy, Curtin University
Australia Telescope National Facility)
- C. W. James
(Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy, Curtin University
ARC Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO))
- S. Osłowski
(Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn)
- H. Qiu
(Australia Telescope National Facility
ARC Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO)
School of Physics, University of Sydney)
- M. Sammons
(Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy, Curtin University)
- A. W. Hotan
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- M. A. Voronkov
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- R. J. Beresford
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- M. Brothers
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- A. J. Brown
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- J. D. Bunton
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- A. P. Chippendale
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- C. Haskins
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- M. Leach
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- M. Marquarding
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- D. McConnell
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- M. A. Pilawa
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- E. M. Sadler
(ARC Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO)
School of Physics, University of Sydney)
- E. R. Troup
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- J. Tuthill
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- M. T. Whiting
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- J. R. Allison
(University of Oxford)
- C. S. Anderson
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- M. E. Bell
(Australia Telescope National Facility
ARC Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO)
University of Technology Sydney)
- J. D. Collier
(Australia Telescope National Facility
Western Sydney University)
- G. Gürkan
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- G. Heald
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
- C. J. Riseley
(Australia Telescope National Facility)
Abstract
Despite considerable efforts over the past decade, only 34 fast radio bursts—intense bursts of radio emission from beyond our Galaxy—have been reported1,2. Attempts to understand the population as a whole have been hindered by the highly heterogeneous nature of the searches, which have been conducted with telescopes of different sensitivities, at a range of radio frequencies, and in environments corrupted by different levels of radio-frequency interference from human activity. Searches have been further complicated by uncertain burst positions and brightnesses—a consequence of the transient nature of the sources and the poor angular resolution of the detecting instruments. The discovery of repeating bursts from one source3, and its subsequent localization4 to a dwarf galaxy at a distance of 3.7 billion light years, confirmed that the population of fast radio bursts is located at cosmological distances. However, the nature of the emission remains elusive. Here we report a well controlled, wide-field radio survey for these bursts. We found 20, none of which repeated during follow-up observations between 185–1,097 hours after the initial detections. The sample includes both the nearest and the most energetic bursts detected so far. The survey demonstrates that there is a relationship between burst dispersion and brightness and that the high-fluence bursts are the nearby analogues of the more distant events found in higher-sensitivity, narrower-field surveys5.
Suggested Citation
R. M. Shannon & J.-P. Macquart & K. W. Bannister & R. D. Ekers & C. W. James & S. Osłowski & H. Qiu & M. Sammons & A. W. Hotan & M. A. Voronkov & R. J. Beresford & M. Brothers & A. J. Brown & J. D. Bu, 2018.
"The dispersion–brightness relation for fast radio bursts from a wide-field survey,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 562(7727), pages 386-390, October.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:562:y:2018:i:7727:d:10.1038_s41586-018-0588-y
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0588-y
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