论文标题
FRB 20121102a 11月在2018年使用Arecibo望远镜观察到
The FRB 20121102A November rain in 2018 observed with the Arecibo Telescope
论文作者
论文摘要
我们提出了由305-m Arecibo望远镜检测到的FRB 20121102a的849次新爆发。进行观察是我们常规运动的一部分,以监视爆发性能的活动和演变。报告的10个观察结果是在1150至1730 MHz之间进行的,并在2018年11月左右的活动期间下降。所有爆发均以相同的分散度度进行了分散,并且与单个值的单一值为562.4(1)PC/cm $^3 $。速率在每小时的0爆发和218(16)爆发之间变化,这是迄今为止观察到的最高速率。连续爆发之间的时间显示了双峰分布。我们发现,速率变化的泊松过程最能描述分离> 0.1 s的到达时间。在22 ms的时间尺度上的聚类反映了源和发射机制的特征时间尺度。我们通过将2D高斯人与时间漂移拟合到动态光谱中的每个子爆发,分析爆发的光谱时间结构。我们发现子爆发的漂移与其持续时间之间存在线性关系。同时,漂移与来自悲伤的骨骼效应的一致。当前模型尚未预测这一点。能量分布显示出过量的高能量突发,即使在单个观测值中,也是由单个幂律建模的。我们发现与早期和后来发表的观察结果相比,能量分布,平均光谱和悲伤的骨膜漂移的长期变化。尽管爆发率很高,但我们发现没有严格的短期周期性。
We present 849 new bursts from FRB 20121102A detected with the 305-m Arecibo Telescope. Observations were conducted as part of our regular campaign to monitor activity and evolution of burst properties. The 10 reported observations were carried out between 1150 and 1730 MHz and fall in the active period around November 2018. All bursts were dedispersed at the same dispersion measure and are consistent with a single value of 562.4(1) pc/cm$^3$. The rate varies between 0 bursts and 218(16) bursts per hour, the highest rate observed to date. The times between consecutive bursts show a bimodal distribution. We find that a Poisson process with varying rate best describes arrival times with separations >0.1 s. Clustering on timescales of 22 ms reflects a characteristic timescale of the source and possibly the emission mechanism. We analyse the spectro-temporal structure of the bursts by fitting 2D Gaussians with a temporal drift to each sub-burst in the dynamic spectra. We find a linear relationship between the sub-burst's drift and its duration. At the same time, the drifts are consistent with coming from the sad-trombone effect. This has not been predicted by current models. The energy distribution shows an excess of high energy bursts and is insufficiently modelled by a single power-law even within single observations. We find long-term changes in the energy distribution, the average spectrum, and the sad-trombone drift, compared to earlier and later published observations. Despite the large burst rate, we find no strict short-term periodicity.