RRATs number up to 400000 in the Galaxy with a birth rate of at most 1.4 per century, comparable in size to pulsars at high luminosities and consistent with supernova rates.
C., et al., 2022, @doi [ ] 10.1093/mnras/stac579 , https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2022MNRAS.512.1483B 512
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
years
2026 3roles
method 1polarities
use method 1representative citing papers
A second coherent radio burst spanning 704-4032 MHz with spectral index -2.18, 54% linear and 22% circular polarization, and an orthogonal polarization angle jump was detected from 2XMM J104608.7-594306, showing rare radio activity in sources thought to be radio-quiet.
The PINK updates enhance the CELEBI FRB pipeline with better astrometry, time-frequency gating, polarization calibration, DM optimization tools, and a software container for improved efficiency and localization of events like FRB 20251019A.
citing papers explorer
-
The RRATalog: a Galactic census of rotating radio transients
RRATs number up to 400000 in the Galaxy with a birth rate of at most 1.4 per century, comparable in size to pulsars at high luminosities and consistent with supernova rates.
-
A bright wideband radio burst from the isolated neutron star 2XMM J104608.7$-$594306
A second coherent radio burst spanning 704-4032 MHz with spectral index -2.18, 54% linear and 22% circular polarization, and an orthogonal polarization angle jump was detected from 2XMM J104608.7-594306, showing rare radio activity in sources thought to be radio-quiet.
-
A PINK update: Improvements to the CELEBI fast radio burst data reduction and analysis pipeline
The PINK updates enhance the CELEBI FRB pipeline with better astrometry, time-frequency gating, polarization calibration, DM optimization tools, and a software container for improved efficiency and localization of events like FRB 20251019A.