Revealing the Dynamic Magnetoionic Environments of Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources through Multiyear Polarimetric Monitoring with CHIME/FRB

Open Access
Authors
  • V.M. Kaspi
  • J. Su
  • M. Bhardwaj
  • T. Cassanelli
  • P. Chawla
  • F. Dong
  • E. Fonseca
  • C. Leung
  • D.Z. Li
  • C. Ng
  • C. Patel
  • A.B. Pearlman
  • E. Petroff
  • Z. Pleunis
  • M. Rafiei-Ravandi
  • M. Rahman
  • K.R. Sand
  • K. Shin
  • I.H. Stairs
  • S. Tendulkar
Publication date 01-07-2023
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 82
Volume | Issue number 951 | 1
Number of pages 20
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) display a confounding variety of burst properties and host-galaxy associations. Repeating FRBs offer insight into the FRB population by enabling spectral, temporal, and polarimetric properties to be tracked over time. Here, we report on the polarized observations of 12 repeating sources using multiyear monitoring with the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) over 400-800 MHz. We observe significant rotation measure (RM) variations from many sources in our sample, including RM changes of several hundred radians per square meter over month timescales from FRBs 20181119A, 20190303A, and 20190417A, and more modest RM variability ($RM ≲ few tens of radians per square meter) from FRBs 20181030A, 20190208A, 20190213B, and 20190117A over equivalent timescales. Several repeaters display a frequency-dependent degree of linear polarization that is consistent with depolarization via scattering. Combining our measurements of RM variations with equivalent constraints on DM variability, we estimate the average line-of-sight magnetic field strength in the local environment of each repeater. In general, repeating FRBs display RM variations that are more prevalent and/or extreme than those seen from radio pulsars in the Milky Way and the Magellanic Clouds, suggesting repeating FRBs and pulsars occupy distinct magnetoionic environments.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ACD188
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