A decade of fast radio bursts
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Modern astrophysics is undergoing a revolution. As detector technology has advanced, and astronomers have been able to study the sky with finer temporal detail, a rich diversity of sources which vary on timescales from years down to a few nanoseconds has been found. Among these are Fast Radio Bursts, with pulses of millisecond duration and anomalously high dispersion compared to Galactic pulsars, first seen a decade ago. Since then, a new research community is actively working on a variety of experiments and developing models to explain this new phenomenon, and devising ways to use them as astrophysical tools. In this article, I describe how astronomers have reached this point, review the highlights from the first decade of research in this field, give some current breaking news, and look ahead to what might be expected in the next few years.
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Generalized Distributions of Host Dispersion Measures in the Fast Radio Burst Cosmology
Generalizing the host galaxy dispersion measure distribution in FRB cosmology with 125 events produces Hubble constant estimates consistent with Planck 2018 and SH0ES while strongly favoring these models over narrow-p...
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