5 research outputs found
A LOFAR radio search for single and periodic pulses from M31
Bright, short radio bursts are emitted by sources at a large range of
distances: from the nearby Crab pulsar to remote Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs). FRBs
are likely to originate from distant neutron stars, but our knowledge of the
radio pulsar population has been limited to the Galaxy and the Magellanic
Clouds. In an attempt to increase our understanding of extragalactic pulsar
populations, and its giant-pulse emission, we employed the low-frequency radio
telescope LOFAR to search the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) for radio bursts emitted
by young, Crab-like pulsars. For direct comparison we also present a LOFAR
study on the low-frequency giant pulses from the Crab pulsar; their fluence
distribution follows a power law with slope 3.04(3). A number of candidate
signals were detected from M31 but none proved persistent. FRBs are sometimes
thought of as Crab-like pulsars with exceedingly bright giant pulses -- given
our sensitivity, we can rule out that M31 hosts pulsars more than an order of
magnitude brighter than the Crab pulsar, assuming their pulse scattering
follows that of the known FRBs.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 6 pages with 4 nice figure
Reproduction package for the paper "LOFAR radio search for single and periodic pulses from M31"
This is a basic reproduction package for the paper "LOFAR radio search for single and periodic pulses from M31" by Joeri van Leeuwen et al. (2020)
Reproduction package for the paper "The Apertif Radio Transient System (ARTS): Design, Commissioning, Data Release, and Detection of the first 5 Fast Radio Bursts"
This is a basic reproduction package for the paper "The Apertif Radio Transient System (ARTS): Design, Commissioning, Data Release, and Detection of the first 5 Fast Radio Bursts" by van Leeuwen et al. (2023). * arXiv:arXiv:2205.12362 * DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/20224410
The Apertif Radio Transient System (ARTS): Design, commissioning, data release, and detection of the first five fast radio bursts
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) must be powered by uniquely energetic emission mechanisms. This requirement has eliminated a number of possible source types, but several remain. Identifying the physical nature of FRB emitters arguably requires good localisation of more detections, as well as broad-band studies enabled by real-time alerting. In this paper, we present the Apertif Radio Transient System (ARTS), a supercomputing radio-telescope instrument that performs real-time FRB detection and localisation on the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) interferometer. It reaches coherent-addition sensitivity over the entire field of the view of the primary-dish beam. After commissioning results verified that the system performed as planned, we initiated the Apertif FRB survey (ALERT). Over the first 5 weeks we observed at design sensitivity in 2019, we detected five new FRBs, and interferometrically localised each of them to 0.4–10 sq. arcmin. All detections are broad band, very narrow, of the order of 1 ms in duration, and unscattered. Dispersion measures are generally high. Only through the very high time and frequency resolution of ARTS are these hard-to-find FRBs detected, producing an unbiased view of the intrinsic population properties. Most localisation regions are small enough to rule out the presence of associated persistent radio sources. Three FRBs cut through the halos of M31 and M33. We demonstrate that Apertif can localise one-off FRBs with an accuracy that maps magneto-ionic material along well-defined lines of sight. The rate of one every ~7 days ensures a considerable number of new sources are detected for such a study. The combination of the detection rate and localisation accuracy exemplified by the first five ARTS FRBs thus marks a new phase in which a growing number of bursts can be used to probe our Universe