4.7 Article

Constraints on the engines of fast radio bursts

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 494, Issue 4, Pages 4627-4644

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa1036

Keywords

acceleration of particles; plasmas; stars: magnetars; stars: neutron

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [PHY-1607611]
  2. U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) through the NASA Hubble Fellowship - Space Telescope Science Institute [HST-HF2-51412.001-A]
  3. Simons Foundation through the Simons Fellows Program [606260]
  4. NASA ATP [80NSSC18K1104]
  5. NASA [NAS5-26555]

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We model the sample of fast radio bursts (FRBs), including the newly discovered CHIME repeaters, using the decelerating synchrotron maser blast wave model of Metzger, Margalit & Sironi (2019), which built on earlier work by Lyubarsky (2014), Beloborodov (2017). This model postulates that FRBs are precursor radiation from ultrarelativistic magnetized shocks generated as flare ejecta from a central engine collides with an effectively stationary external medium. Downward drifting of the burst frequency structure naturally arises from the deceleration of the blast wave coupled with the dependence of the maser spectral energy distribution, and induced Compton scattering depth, on the upstream medium. The data are consistent with FRBs being produced by flares of energy E-flare similar to 10(43)-10(46)(f(xi)/10(-3))(-4/5) erg, where f(xi) is the maser efficiency, and minimum bulk Lorentz factors Gamma approximate to 10(2)-10(3), which generate the observed FRBs at shock radii r(sh) similar to 10(12)-10(13) cm. We infer upstream densities n(ext)(r(sh)) similar to 10(2)-10(4) cm(-3) and radial profiles n(ext) proportional to r(-k) showing a range of slopes k approximate to [- 2, 1] (which are seen to evolve between bursts), both broadly consistent with the upstream medium being the inner edge of an ion-loaded shell released by a recent energetic flare. The burst time-scales, energetics, rates, and external medium properties are consistent with repeating FRBs arising from young, hyperactive flaring magnetars, but the methodology presented is generally applicable to any central engine which injects energy impulsively into a dense magnetized medium. Several uncertainties and variations of the model regarding the composition and magnetization of the upstream medium, and the effects of the strong electric field of the FRB wave (strength parameter a >> 1) on the upstream medium and its scattering properties, are discussed. One-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations of magnetized shocks into a pair plasma are presented which demonstrate that high maser efficiency can be preserved, even in the limit a >> 1 in which the FRB wave accelerates the upstream electrons to ultrarelativistic speeds.

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