Abstract

ABSTRACT Scintillation of compact radio sources results from the interference between images caused by multipath propagation, and probes the intervening scattering plasma and the velocities of the emitting source and scattering screen. In FRB20201124A, a repeating fast radio burst (FRB) that entered a period of extreme activity, we obtained many burst detections in observations at the upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (uGMRT) and the Effelsberg 100-m Radio Telescope. Bursts nearby in time show similar scintillation patterns, and we measure a scintillation time-scale of 14.3 ± 1.2 and 7 ± 2 min at Effelsberg (1370 MHz) and uGMRT (650 MHz), respectively, by correlating burst pair spectra. The scintillation bandwidth scaled to 1 GHz is 0.5 ± 0.1 MHz, and the inferred scintillation velocity at Effelsberg is $V_{\mathrm{ISS}}\approx (59\pm 7) \sqrt{d_{\mathrm{ l}}/2\, \rm {kpc}}~{\rm km~s}^{-1}$, higher than Earth’s velocity for any screen beyond a lens distance of $d_{\mathrm{ l}} \gtrsim 400\,$ pc. From the measured scintillation bandwidth, FRB20201124A has comparatively lower scattering than nearby pulsars, and is underscattered by a factor of ∼30 or ∼1200 compared to the NE2001 and YMW16 model predictions, respectively. This underscattering together with the measured scintillation velocity is consistent with a scattering screen more nearby the Earth at $d_{\mathrm{ l}} \sim 400\,$ pc, rather than at 2 kpc spiral arm that NE2001 predicts to be the dominant source of scattering. With future measurements, the distance, geometry, and velocity of the scattering screen could be obtained through modelling of the annual variation in VISS, or through interstation time delays or interferometric observations. Scintillation/scattering measurements of FRBs could help improve Galactic electron density models, particularly in the Galactic halo or at high Galactic latitudes.

Highlights

  • Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are highly dispersed, micro- to millisecond duration radio bursts of extragalactic origin

  • We have measured a scintillation timescale of FRB20201124A, and the inferred scintillation velocity suggests a velocity of 10s of km/s of the intervening scattering screen, or that the scattering screen is much closer to the Earth than at ∼ 2 kpc which is the expected peak of scattering from the NE2001 model

  • Other FRBs remain active over time, one can model annual variations of scintillation timescales to obtain screen distances and geometries, methods which have been used successfully in intraday variable quasars and in pulsar scintillation

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are highly dispersed, micro- to millisecond duration radio bursts of extragalactic origin Their dispersion measure (DM) contains the contribution of all free electrons along the line of sight, including their host galaxy, the intergalactic medium (IGM), and the Milky Way (MW). Along with the DM, FRBs often exhibit scintillation and scattering, effects of multipath propagation arising from inhomogeneities in the electron density along the line of sight (LOS) These are not expected to have large contributions from the IGM, and are likely dominated by the local environment, the host galaxy, and the MW. We measure a scintillation timescale of FRB20201124A at Effelsberg and at the uGMRT on separate days by correlating the spectra of closely spaced burst pairs.

Observations
Extracting Burst Spectra
MEASURING SCINTILLATION PARAMETERS
Scintillation Bandwidth
The low scattering of FRB20201124A
Predictions from electron-density models
Low Scattering Lines of Sight
Scintillation Velocity
Host screen constraint from 2-screen model
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
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