A polarization catalog of 6,131 bursts from FRB 20240114A reveals linearly decreasing rotation measure, stable dispersion measure, high linear polarization fractions, low circular polarization, and a broad distribution of intrinsic polarization angles, indicating a dynamically evolving magneto-ionic
H., Michilli, D., Spitler, L
5 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
fields
astro-ph.HE 5years
2026 5verdicts
UNVERDICTED 5roles
background 1polarities
unclear 1representative citing papers
CHIME/FRB has now cataloged 80 repeating FRB sources whose burst rates and upper limits are consistent with a power-law distribution implying 50-100% of all FRBs repeat.
A search of repeating FRBs identifies RM flare candidates in FRB 20121102A, FRB 20201124A, and FRB 20180916B, suggesting such events may be common and tied to dynamic magneto-ionic environments.
Wideband observations show M28A giant pulses differ from FRB 20200120E bursts in duration, luminosity, timing statistics, and spectral structure, yielding no strong evidence for a direct link.
FRB 20220912A shows bimodal burst intervals, a 2.3-sigma DM rise of 1.4 pc cm^{-3} yr^{-1}, no RM trend, and possibly unique local environment compared to other repeaters.
citing papers explorer
-
FAST Polarization Catalog of FRB 20240114A
A polarization catalog of 6,131 bursts from FRB 20240114A reveals linearly decreasing rotation measure, stable dispersion measure, high linear polarization fractions, low circular polarization, and a broad distribution of intrinsic polarization angles, indicating a dynamically evolving magneto-ionic
-
Discovery of 30 Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources and Uniform Population Statistics of 80 Repeating Sources from CHIME/FRB
CHIME/FRB has now cataloged 80 repeating FRB sources whose burst rates and upper limits are consistent with a power-law distribution implying 50-100% of all FRBs repeat.
-
A Search for Rotation Measure Flare Candidates in Repeating Fast Radio Bursts
A search of repeating FRBs identifies RM flare candidates in FRB 20121102A, FRB 20201124A, and FRB 20180916B, suggesting such events may be common and tied to dynamic magneto-ionic environments.
-
Searching for links between energetic millisecond pulsars and repeating fast radio bursts
Wideband observations show M28A giant pulses differ from FRB 20200120E bursts in duration, luminosity, timing statistics, and spectral structure, yielding no strong evidence for a direct link.
-
Radio Monitoring Campaign of Active Repeater FRB 20220912A with CHIME
FRB 20220912A shows bimodal burst intervals, a 2.3-sigma DM rise of 1.4 pc cm^{-3} yr^{-1}, no RM trend, and possibly unique local environment compared to other repeaters.