An activity transition in FRB 20201124A Methodological rigor, detection of frequency-dependent cessation, and a geometric magnetar model

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 04-2025
Journal Astronomy and Astrophysics
Article number A194
Volume | Issue number 696
Number of pages 25
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We report detections of fast radio bursts (FRBs) from the repeating source FRB 20201124A with Apertif/WSRT and GMRT, and measurements of basic burst properties, especially the dispersion measure (DM) and fluence. Based on comparisons of these properties with previously published larger samples, we argue that the excess DM reported earlier for pulses with integrated signal-to-noise ratios .1000 is due to incompletely accounting for what is known as the sad trombone effect, even when using structure-maximizing DM algorithms. Our investigations of fluence distributions next lead us to advise against formal power-law fitting; we especially caution against the use of the least-squares method, and we demonstrate the large biases involved. A maximum likelihood estimator (MLE) provides a much more accurate estimate of the power law, and we provide accessible code for direct inclusion in future research. Our GMRT observations were fortuitously scheduled around the end of the Spring 2021 activity window as recorded by FAST. We detected several bursts (one of them very strong) at 400/600 MHz, a few hours after sensitive FAST non-detections already showed the 1.3 GHz FRB emission to have ceased. After FRB 20180916B, this is a second example of a frequency-dependent activity window identified in a repeating FRB source. Since numerous efforts have so far failed to determine a spin period for FRB 20201124A, we conjecture that it is an ultra-long-period magnetar, with a period on the scale of months, and with a very wide, highly irregular duty cycle. Assuming the emission comes from closed field lines, we used radius-to-frequency mapping and polarization information from other studies to constrain the magnetospheric geometry and location of the emission region. Our initial findings are consistent with a possible connection between FRBs and crustal motion events.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202451413
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105003176318
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An activity transition in FRB 20201124A (Final published version)
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