| Literature DB >> 30305732 |
R M Shannon1,2,3,4, J-P Macquart5,6, K W Bannister7, R D Ekers8,7, C W James8,9, S Osłowski10, H Qiu7,9,11, M Sammons8, A W Hotan12, M A Voronkov7, R J Beresford7, M Brothers7, A J Brown7, J D Bunton7, A P Chippendale7, C Haskins12, M Leach7, M Marquarding7, D McConnell7, M A Pilawa7, E M Sadler9,11, E R Troup7, J Tuthill7, M T Whiting7, J R Allison13, C S Anderson12, M E Bell7,9,14, J D Collier7,15, G Gürkan12, G Heald12, C J Riseley12.
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.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30305732 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0588-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962