4.7 Article

Detection of Bursts from FRB 121102 with the Effelsberg 100m Radio Telescope at 5GHz and the Role of Scintillation

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 863, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aad332

Keywords

galaxies: dwarf; ISM: general; radiation mechanisms: non-thermal; radio continuum: general

Funding

  1. ERC Starting Grant BEACON [279702]
  2. Max Planck Society
  3. NANOGrav Physics Frontiers Center - National Science Foundation [1430284]
  4. ERC Starting Grant DRAGNET [337062]
  5. STFC [ST/P000649/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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FRB 121102, the only repeating fast radio burst (FRB) known to date, was discovered at 1.4 GHz and shortly after the discovery of its repeating nature, detected up to 2.4 GHz. Here, we present three bursts detected with the 100 m Effelsberg radio telescope at 4.85 GHz. All three bursts exhibited frequency structure on broad and narrow frequency scales. Using an autocorrelation function analysis, we measured a characteristic bandwidth of the small-scale structure of 6.4 +/- 1.6 MHz, which is consistent with the diffractive scintillation bandwidth for this line of sight through the Galactic interstellar medium (ISM) predicted by the NE2001 model. These were the only detections in a campaign totaling 22 hr in 10 observing epochs spanning five months. The observed burst detection rate within this observation was inconsistent with a Poisson process with a constant average occurrence rate; three bursts arrived in the final 0.3 hr of a 2 hr observation on 2016 August 20. We therefore observed a change in the rate of detectable bursts during this observation, and we argue that boosting by diffractive interstellar scintillations may have played a role in the detectability. Understanding whether changes in the detection rate of bursts from FRB 121102 observed at other radio frequencies and epochs are also a product of propagation effects, such as scintillation boosting by the Galactic ISM or plasma lensing in the host galaxy, or an intrinsic property of the burst emission will require further observations.

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