Relativistic single-particle scattering cross sections for strong electromagnetic waves in strongly magnetized plasma are computed for arbitrary polarization and angle, showing strong suppression and sub-unity optical depth for quasi-parallel propagation.
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10 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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Model-independent constraints expose kinetic-luminosity and induced-Compton optical-depth bottlenecks that rule out or severely limit external-shock and light-cylinder reconnection FRB models while favoring magnetospheric scenarios with in-situ acceleration.
CASM-256 is a new 256-antenna radio array at Owens Valley that uses real-time digital beamforming to search for fast radio bursts and galactic transients over a huge sky area.
SPICE is an automated pipeline that recovers known pulsars in GMRT data by detecting scintillation signatures in interferometric visibilities.
Simulations indicate HI absorption in FRB spectra is detectable when scintillation decorrelation bandwidth differs markedly from absorption width, with ≳1000 stacked bursts needed at current sensitivities.
PATH is extended with three fitted P(m_r|z) prior models combined with P(z|DM), raising host-association confidence for ASKAP FRBs while showing fainter-than-expected host magnitude distribution.
Matching FRB QPOs to crustal modes constrains the neutron star mass to 1.00-1.76 solar masses, radius to ~13 km, and nuclear symmetry energy slope L to 59.5-96.8 MeV.
This review summarizes FRB properties and outlines how SKA capabilities will help identify progenitors and enable cosmological applications.
A reported periodic fast radio burst is reclassified as Galactic pulsar emission due to CHIME calibration and beam-pointing error.
Author contributes to SPOTLIGHT collaboration using modern radio tech to search for fast radio transients and pulsars.
citing papers explorer
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Scattering of Strong Radio Waves by Particles in Strongly Magnetized Plasmas and Implications for Fast Radio Bursts
Relativistic single-particle scattering cross sections for strong electromagnetic waves in strongly magnetized plasma are computed for arbitrary polarization and angle, showing strong suppression and sub-unity optical depth for quasi-parallel propagation.
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The kinetic-energy bottleneck in Fast Radio Burst models
Model-independent constraints expose kinetic-luminosity and induced-Compton optical-depth bottlenecks that rule out or severely limit external-shock and light-cylinder reconnection FRB models while favoring magnetospheric scenarios with in-situ acceleration.
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The Role of Scintillation in Detecting HI Absorption in FRB Spectra
Simulations indicate HI absorption in FRB spectra is detectable when scintillation decorrelation bandwidth differs markedly from absorption width, with ≳1000 stacked bursts needed at current sensitivities.
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Updating the PATH framework with FRB host galaxy models
PATH is extended with three fitted P(m_r|z) prior models combined with P(z|DM), raising host-association confidence for ASKAP FRBs while showing fainter-than-expected host magnitude distribution.
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Estimation of neutron star mass and radius of FRB 20240114A by identification of crustal oscillations
Matching FRB QPOs to crustal modes constrains the neutron star mass to 1.00-1.76 solar masses, radius to ~13 km, and nuclear symmetry energy slope L to 59.5-96.8 MeV.
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The Astrophysics of Fast Radio Bursts
This review summarizes FRB properties and outlines how SKA capabilities will help identify progenitors and enable cosmological applications.
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A series of unfortunate events: CHIME/FRB misclassification of a Galactic pulsar as a periodic fast radio burst
A reported periodic fast radio burst is reclassified as Galactic pulsar emission due to CHIME calibration and beam-pointing error.
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Searching For Fast Radio Transients And Radio Pulsars Using SPOTLIGHT
Author contributes to SPOTLIGHT collaboration using modern radio tech to search for fast radio transients and pulsars.