MeerKAT discovery of a hyperactive repeating fast radio burst source

Open Access
Authors
  • K. Shaji
  • K.Y. Hanmer
  • M. Caleb
  • M.C. Bezuidenhout
  • F. Jankowski
  • R. Breton
  • E.D. Barr
  • M. Kramer
  • P. J. Groot
  • S. Bloemen
  • P. Vreeswijk
  • D. Pieterse
  • P.A. Woudt
  • R.P. Fender
  • R.A.D. Wijnands
  • D.A.H. Buckley
Publication date 06-2025
Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume | Issue number 540 | 2
Pages (from-to) 1685-1700
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
We present the discovery and localization of a repeating fast radio burst (FRB) source from the MeerTRAP project, a commensal fast radio transient search programme using the MeerKAT telescope. FRB 20240619D was first discovered on 2024 June 19 with three bursts being detected within 2 min in the MeerKAT L band (856–1712 MHz). We conducted follow-up observations of FRB 20240619D with MeerKAT using the Ultra-High Frequency (UHF; 544_1088 MHz), L-band and S-band (1968–2843 MHz) receivers one week after its discovery, and recorded a total of 249 bursts. The MeerKAT-detected bursts exhibit band-limited emission with an average fractional bandwidth of 0.31, 0.34, and 0.48 in the UHF, L-band, and S-band, respectively. We find our observations are complete down to a fluence limit of
 Jy ms, above which the cumulative burst rate follows a power law R(> F) α (F/1 Jy ms)γ with γ = 1.6 ± 0.1 and - 1.7 ± 0.1 in the UHF and L band, respectively. The near-simultaneous L-band, UHF, and S-band observations reveal a frequency dependent burst rate with 3x more bursts being detected in the L band than in the UHF and S band, suggesting a spectral turnover in the burst energy distribution of FRB 20240619D. Our polarimetric analysis demonstrates that most of the bursts have ∼ 100 per cent linear polarization fractions and ∼10-20 per cent circular polarization fractions. We find no optical counterpart of FRB 20240619D in the MeerLICHT optical observations simultaneous to the radio observations and set a fluence upper limit in MeerLICHT’s q band of 0.76 Jy ms and an optical-to-radio fluence ratio limit of 0.034 for a 15 s exposure.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staf793
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105008174333
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