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arxiv: 2307.02303 · v2 · pith:CHFI54EFnew · submitted 2023-07-05 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE

Detection of ultra-fast radio bursts from FRB 20121102A

classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE
keywords frbsburstsradiodurationsemissionrangetimescalestotal
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Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are extragalactic transients with typical durations of milliseconds. FRBs have been shown, however, to fluctuate on a wide range of timescales: some show sub-microsecond sub-bursts while others last up to a few seconds in total. Probing FRBs on a range of timescales is crucial for understanding their emission physics, how to detect them effectively, and how to maximize their utility as astrophysical probes. FRB 20121102A is the first-known repeating FRB source. Here we show that FRB 20121102A is able to produce isolated microsecond-duration bursts whose total durations are more than ten times shorter than all other known FRBs to date. The polarimetric properties of these micro-bursts resemble those of the longer-lasting bursts, suggesting a common emission mechanism producing FRBs spanning a factor of 1,000 in duration. Furthermore, this work shows that there exists a population of ultra-fast radio bursts that current wide-field FRB searches are missing due to insufficient time-resolution. These results indicate that FRBs occur more frequently and with greater diversity than initially thought. This could also influence our understanding of energy, wait time, and burst rate distributions.

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  1. Fast Radio Bursts produced during collapse of macroscopic X-mode in magnetized pair plasma

    astro-ph.HE 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    Nonlinear collapse of X-modes in magnetized pair plasma near current starvation produces short bright EM pulses identified as Fast Radio Bursts.