论文标题
快速无线电爆发主机环境的高分辨率视图
A High-Resolution View of Fast Radio Burst Host Environments
论文作者
论文摘要
我们提出了八个快速无线电爆发(FRB)主宿主星系的紫外线望远镜(HST/WFC3)紫外线的紫外线观测,其中包括三个已知重复FRB的宿主。我们相对于他们的主机星系光分布量化了它们的空间分布和位置,发现它们发生在中等主机的标准化范围,为1.4 $ r_e $([[0.6,2.1] $ r_e $; 68%的间隔)出现在宿主的fainter区域,但按照IR光线为单位,但按照IR光线的整体痕迹。我们测试的分布中的FRB并未清楚地追踪任何其他具有已知祖细胞的瞬时群体的分布,并且在统计学上与LGRB,H-Poor SLSNE,SGRB和富含CA的瞬变的位置不同。我们进一步发现,与宿主的平均全球值相比,大多数FRB不在局部恒星形成率升高和恒星质量表面密度的区域。我们还将上限放置在$ m _ {\ rm ir} \ gtrsim \!24.8-27.6 $ 〜AB〜MAG的FRB位置的上限,将卫星和背景星系限制在较低的亮度低于FRB121102的主机亮度以下。我们发现5/8 FRB宿主在红外光中表现出清晰的螺旋臂特征,并且位于此类宿主中所有稳定的FRB的位置与其螺旋臂一致,尽管不在其最亮的地区。我们的结果并不能强烈支持FRB的主要祖细胞通道与最大(剥离的envelope)恒星连接,也不能强烈支持需要踢球和较长延迟时间的事件(中子星星合并)。
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST/WFC3) ultraviolet and infrared observations of eight fast radio burst (FRB) host galaxies with sub-arcsecond localizations, including the hosts of three known repeating FRBs. We quantify their spatial distributions and locations with respect to their host galaxy light distributions, finding that they occur at moderate host normalized-offsets of 1.4 $r_e$ ([0.6,2.1] $r_e$; 68% interval), occur on fainter regions of their hosts in terms of IR light, but overall trace the radial distribution of IR light in their galaxies. The FRBs in our tested distribution do not clearly trace the distributions of any other transient population with known progenitors, and are statistically distinct from the locations of LGRBs, H-poor SLSNe, SGRBs, and Ca-rich transients. We further find that most FRBs are not in regions of elevated local star formation rate and stellar mass surface densities in comparison to the mean global values of their hosts. We also place upper limits to the IR flux at the FRB positions of $m_{\rm IR}\gtrsim\!24.8-27.6$~AB~mag, constraining both satellite and background galaxies to luminosities well below the host luminosity of FRB121102. We find that 5/8 FRB hosts exhibit clear spiral arm features in IR light, and that the positions of all well-localized FRBs located in such hosts are consistent with their spiral arms, although not on their brightest regions. Our results do not strongly support the primary progenitor channel of FRBs being connected either with the most massive (stripped-envelope) stars, or with events which require kicks and long delay times (neutron star mergers).