A MeerKAT, e-MERLIN, H.E.S.S., and Swift search for persistent and transient emission associated with three localized FRBs

Open Access
Authors
  • J.O. Chibueze
  • M. Caleb
  • L. Spitler
  • H. Ashkar
  • F. Schüssler
  • B.W. Stappers
  • C. Venter
  • I. Heywood
  • A.M.S. Richards
  • D.R.A. Williams
  • M. Kramer
  • R. Beswick
  • M.C. Bezuidenhout
  • R.P. Breton
  • L.N. Driessen
  • F. Jankowski
  • E.F. Keane
  • M. Malenta
  • M. Mickaliger
  • V. Morello
  • H. Qiu
  • K. Rajwade
  • S. Sanidas
  • M. Surnis
  • T.W. Scragg
  • C.R.H. Walker
  • R. Wrigley
  • H.E.S.S. Collaboration
  • F. Aharonian
  • D. Berge
  • D.A. Prokhorov
  • J. Vink
Publication date 09-2022
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume | Issue number 515 | 1
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We report on a search for persistent radio emission from the one-off fast radio burst (FRB) 20190714A, as well as from two repeating FRBs, 20190711A and 20171019A, using the MeerKAT radio telescope. For FRB 20171019A, we also conducted simultaneous observations with the High-Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) in very high-energy gamma rays and searched for signals in the ultraviolet, optical, and X-ray bands. For this FRB, we obtain a UV flux upper limit of 1.39×10−16 ergcm−2s−1 Å-1, X-ray limit of ∼6.6×10−14 ergcm−2s−1 and a limit on the very high energy gamma-ray flux Φ(E>120GeV)<1.7×10−12ergcm−2s−1 . We obtain a radio upper limit of ~15 μ Jy beam-1 for persistent emission at the locations of both FRBs 20190711A and 20171019A with MeerKAT. However, we detected an almost unresolved (ratio of integrated flux to peak flux is ~1.7 beam) radio emission, where the synthesized beam size was ~ 8 arcsec size with a peak brightness of ∼53μ Jy beam-1 at MeerKAT and ∼86μ Jy beam-1 at e-MERLIN, possibly associated with FRB 20190714A at z = 0.2365. This represents the first detection of persistent continuum radio emission potentially associated with a (as-yet) non-repeating FRB. If the association is confirmed, one of the strongest remaining distinction between repeaters and non-repeaters would no longer be applicable. A parallel search for repeat bursts from these FRBs revealed no new detections down to a fluence of 0.08 Jy ms for a 1 ms duration burst.
Document type Article
Note This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2022 The Author(s) published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac1601
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A MeerKAT, e-MERLIN, H.E.S.S (Final published version)
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