14 research outputs found
An Injection System for the CHIME/FRB Experiment
Dedicated surveys searching for Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are subject to
selection effects which bias the observed population of events. Software
injection systems are one method of correcting for these biases by injecting a
mock population of synthetic FRBs directly into the realtime search pipeline.
The injected population may then be used to map intrinsic burst properties onto
an expected signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), so long as telescope characteristics
such as the beam model and calibration factors are properly accounted for. This
paper presents an injection system developed for the Canadian Hydrogen
Intensity Mapping Experiment Fast Radio Burst project (CHIME/FRB). The system
was tested to ensure high detection efficiency, and the pulse calibration
method was verified. Using an injection population of ~85,000 synthetic FRBs,
we found that the correlation between fluence and SNR for injected FRBs was
consistent with that of CHIME/FRB detections in the first CHIME/FRB catalog. We
also noted that the sensitivity of the telescope varied strongly as a function
of the broadened burst width, but not as a function of the dispersion measure.
We conclude that some of the machine-learning based Radio Frequency
Interference (RFI) mitigation methods used by CHIME/FRB can be re-trained using
injection data to increase sensitivity to wide events, and that planned
upgrades to the presented injection system will allow for determining a more
accurate CHIME/FRB selection function in the near future.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures. Submitted to A
Localizing FRBs through VLBI with the Algonquin Radio Observatory 10 m Telescope
The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME)/FRB experiment has detected thousands of fast radio bursts (FRBs) due to its sensitivity and wide field of view; however, its low angular resolution prevents it from localizing events to their host galaxies. Very long baseline interferometry (VLBI), triggered by FRB detections from CHIME/FRB will solve the challenge of localization for non-repeating events. Using a refurbished 10 m radio dish at the Algonquin Radio Observatory located in Ontario Canada, we developed a testbed for a VLBI experiment with a theoretical λ/D ≲ 30 mas. We provide an overview of the 10 m system and describe its refurbishment, the data acquisition, and a procedure for fringe fitting that simultaneously estimates the geometric delay used for localization and the dispersive delay from the ionosphere. Using single pulses from the Crab pulsar, we validate the system and localization procedure, and analyze the clock stability between sites, which is critical for coherently delay referencing an FRB event. We find a localization of ∼200 mas is possible with the performance of the current system (single-baseline). Furthermore, for sources with insufficient signal or restricted wideband to simultaneously measure both geometric and ionospheric delays, we show that the differential ionospheric contribution between the two sites must be measured to a precision of 1 × 10-8 pc cm-3 to provide a reasonable localization from a detection in the 400-800 MHz band. Finally we show detection of an FRB observed simultaneously in the CHIME and the Algonquin 10 m telescope, the first non-repeating FRB in this long baseline. This project serves as a testbed for the forthcoming CHIME/FRB Outriggers project
A fast radio burst localized at detection to a galactic disk using very long baseline interferometry
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration, luminous radio transients
of extragalactic origin. These events have been used to trace the baryonic
structure of the Universe using their dispersion measure (DM) assuming that the
contribution from host galaxies can be reliably estimated. However,
contributions from the immediate environment of an FRB may dominate the
observed DM, thus making redshift estimates challenging without a robust host
galaxy association. Furthermore, while at least one Galactic burst has been
associated with a magnetar, other localized FRBs argue against magnetars as the
sole progenitor model. Precise localization within the host galaxy can
discriminate between progenitor models, a major goal of the field. Until now,
localizations on this spatial scale have only been carried out in follow-up
observations of repeating sources. Here we demonstrate the localization of FRB
20210603A with very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) on two baselines, using
data collected only at the time of detection. We localize the burst to SDSS
J004105.82+211331.9, an edge-on galaxy at , and detect recent
star formation in the kiloparsec-scale vicinity of the burst. The edge-on
inclination of the host galaxy allows for a unique comparison between the line
of sight towards the FRB and lines of sight towards known Galactic pulsars. The
DM, Faraday rotation measure (RM), and scattering suggest a progenitor
coincident with the host galactic plane, strengthening the link between the
environment of FRB 20210603A and the disk of its host galaxy. Single-pulse VLBI
localizations of FRBs to within their host galaxies, following the one
presented here, will further constrain the origins and host environments of
one-off FRBs.Comment: 40 pages, 13 figures, submitted. Fixed typo in abstrac
CHIME/FRB Discovery of 25 Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources
We present the discovery of 25 new repeating fast radio burst (FRB) sources
found among CHIME/FRB events detected between 2019 September 30 and 2021 May 1.
The sources were found using a new clustering algorithm that looks for multiple
events co-located on the sky having similar dispersion measures (DMs). The new
repeaters have DMs ranging from 220 pc cm to 1700 pc
cm, and include sources having exhibited as few as two bursts to as many
as twelve. We report a statistically significant difference in both the DM and
extragalactic DM (eDM) distributions between repeating and apparently
nonrepeating sources, with repeaters having lower mean DM and eDM, and we
discuss the implications. We find no clear bimodality between the repetition
rates of repeaters and upper limits on repetition from apparently nonrepeating
sources after correcting for sensitivity and exposure effects, although some
active repeating sources stand out as anomalous. We measure the repeater
fraction and find that it tends to an equilibrium of % over
our exposure thus far. We also report on 14 more sources which are promising
repeating FRB candidates and which merit follow-up observations for
confirmation.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Comments are welcome and follow-up observations are
encouraged
Sub-second periodicity in a fast radio burst
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration flashes of radio waves that
are visible at distances of billions of light-years. The nature of their
progenitors and their emission mechanism remain open astrophysical questions.
Here we report the detection of the multi-component FRB 20191221A and the
identification of a periodic separation of 216.8(1) ms between its components
with a significance of 6.5 sigmas. The long (~3 s) duration and nine or more
components forming the pulse profile make this source an outlier in the FRB
population. Such short periodicity provides strong evidence for a neutron-star
origin of the event. Moreover, our detection favours emission arising from the
neutron-star magnetosphere, as opposed to emission regions located further away
from the star, as predicted by some models.Comment: Updated to conform to the accepted versio
A VLBI Software Correlator for Fast Radio Transients
One major goal in fast radio burst science is to detect fast radio bursts
(FRBs) over a wide field of view without sacrificing the angular resolution
required to pinpoint them to their host galaxies. Wide-field detection and
localization capabilities have already been demonstrated using
connected-element interferometry; the CHIME/FRB Outriggers project will push
this further using widefield cylindrical telescopes as widefield outriggers for
very long baseline interferometry (VLBI). This paper describes an offline VLBI
software correlator written in Python for the CHIME/FRB Outriggers project. It
includes features well-suited to modern widefield instruments like
multibeaming/multiple phase center correlation, pulse gating including coherent
dedispersion, and a novel correlation algorithm based on the quadratic
estimator formalism. This algorithm mitigates sensitivity loss which arises in
instruments where the windowing and channelization is done outside the VLBI
correlator at each station, which accounts for a 30 percent sensitivity drop
away from the phase center. Our correlation algorithm recovers this sensitivity
on both simulated and real data. As an end to end check of our software, we
have written a preliminary pipeline for VLBI calibration and single-pulse
localization, which we use in Lanman et al. (2024) to verify the astrometric
accuracy of the CHIME/FRB Outriggers array.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures. Comments, reference suggestions, and PRs
welcome
Polarization properties of the 128 non-repeating fast radio bursts from the first CHIME/FRB baseband catalog
International audienceWe present a 400-800 MHz polarimetric analysis of 128 non-repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) from the first CHIME/FRB baseband catalog, increasing the total number of FRB sources with polarization properties by a factor of ~3. Of the 128 sources, 89 FRBs have >6 linearly polarized detections, 29 FRBs fall below this significance threshold and are deemed linearly unpolarized, and for 10 FRBs the polarization data are contaminated by instrumental polarization. For the 89 polarized FRBs, we find Faraday rotation measure (RM) amplitudes, after subtracting approximate Milky Way contributions, in the range 0.5-1160 rad m with a median of 53.8 rad m. Most non-repeating FRBs in our sample have RMs consistent with Milky Way-like host galaxies and their linear polarization fractions range from 10% to 100% with a median of 63%. The non-repeater RMs and linear polarization fraction distributions are consistent with those of repeating FRBs. We see marginal evidence that non-repeating FRBs have more constraining lower limits than repeating FRBs for the host electron-density-weighted line-of-sight magnetic field strength. We classify the non-repeating FRB polarization position angle (PA) profiles into four archetypes: (i) single component with constant PA (57% of the sample), (ii) single component with variable PA (10%), (iii) multiple components with a single constant PA (22%), and (iv) multiple components with different or variable PAs (11%). We see no evidence for population-wide frequency-dependent depolarization and, therefore, the spread in the distribution of fractional linear polarization is likely intrinsic to the FRB emission mechanism
Polarization properties of the 128 non-repeating fast radio bursts from the first CHIME/FRB baseband catalog
International audienceWe present a 400-800 MHz polarimetric analysis of 128 non-repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) from the first CHIME/FRB baseband catalog, increasing the total number of FRB sources with polarization properties by a factor of ~3. Of the 128 sources, 89 FRBs have >6 linearly polarized detections, 29 FRBs fall below this significance threshold and are deemed linearly unpolarized, and for 10 FRBs the polarization data are contaminated by instrumental polarization. For the 89 polarized FRBs, we find Faraday rotation measure (RM) amplitudes, after subtracting approximate Milky Way contributions, in the range 0.5-1160 rad m with a median of 53.8 rad m. Most non-repeating FRBs in our sample have RMs consistent with Milky Way-like host galaxies and their linear polarization fractions range from 10% to 100% with a median of 63%. The non-repeater RMs and linear polarization fraction distributions are consistent with those of repeating FRBs. We see marginal evidence that non-repeating FRBs have more constraining lower limits than repeating FRBs for the host electron-density-weighted line-of-sight magnetic field strength. We classify the non-repeating FRB polarization position angle (PA) profiles into four archetypes: (i) single component with constant PA (57% of the sample), (ii) single component with variable PA (10%), (iii) multiple components with a single constant PA (22%), and (iv) multiple components with different or variable PAs (11%). We see no evidence for population-wide frequency-dependent depolarization and, therefore, the spread in the distribution of fractional linear polarization is likely intrinsic to the FRB emission mechanism