The Host Galaxy and Redshift of the Repeating Fast Radio Burst FRB 121102

Open Access
Authors
  • S.P. Tendulkar
  • C.G. Bassa
  • J.M. Cordes
  • G.C. Bower
  • C.J. Law
  • S. Chatterjee
  • E.A.K. Adams
  • S. Bogdanov
  • S. Burke-Spolaor
  • B.J. Butler
  • P. Demorest
  • J.W.T. Hessels
  • V.M. Kaspi
  • T.J.W. Lazio
  • N. Maddox
  • B. Marcote
  • M.A. McLaughlin
  • Z. Paragi
  • S.M. Ransom
  • P. Scholz
  • A. Seymour
  • L.G. Spitler
  • H.J. van Langevelde
  • R.S. Wharton
Publication date 10-01-2017
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number L7
Volume | Issue number 834 | 2
Number of pages 8
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
The precise localization of the repeating fast radio burst (FRB 121102) has provided the first unambiguous association (chance coincidence probability p ≲ 3 × 10‑4) of an FRB with an optical and persistent radio counterpart. We report on optical imaging and spectroscopy of the counterpart and find that it is an extended (0.″6–0.″8) object displaying prominent Balmer and [Oiii] emission lines. Based on the spectrum and emission line ratios, we classify the counterpart as a low-metallicity, star-forming, mr = 25.1 AB mag dwarf galaxy at a redshift of z =0.19273(8), corresponding to a luminosity distance of 972 Mpc. From the angular size, the redshift, and luminosity, we estimate the host galaxy to have a diameter ≲4 kpc and a stellar mass of M* ∼ (4–7) × 107 M, assuming a mass-to-light ratio between 2 to 3 ML‑1. Based on the Hα flux, we estimate the star formation rate of the host to be 0.4 Myr‑1 and a substantial host dispersion measure (DM)depth ≲324 pc cm‑3. The net DM contribution of the host galaxy to FRB 121102 is likely to be lower than this value depending on geometrical factors. We show that the persistent radio source at FRB 121102’s location reported by Marcote et al. is offset from the galaxy’s center of light by ∼200 mas and the host galaxy does not show optical signatures for AGN activity. If FRB121102 is typical of the wider FRB population and if futureinterferometric localizations preferentially find them in dwarf galaxies with low metallicities and prominent emission lines, they would share such a preference with long gamma-ray bursts and superluminous supernovae.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/834/2/L7
Published at https://arxiv.org/abs/1701.01100
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017ApJ...834L...7T
Downloads
1701.01100.pd (Accepted author manuscript)
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