The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2023)

Is the M81 Fast Radio Burst Host Globular Cluster Special?

  • Kristen C. Dage,
  • Arash Bahramian,
  • Clancy W. James,
  • Arunav Kundu,
  • Katherine L. Rhode,
  • Jay Strader,
  • Enrico Vesperini,
  • Stephen E. Zepf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad03e4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 957, no. 2
p. L17

Abstract

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We use multiband archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations to measure the photometric and structural parameters of the M81 globular cluster (GC) that hosts the fast radio burst FRB 20200120E. Our best-fitting King model has an effective radius r _h = 3.06 pc with a moderate King model concentration of c = 53, and an inferred core radius of 0.81 pc. We revisit the exact astrometric location of the FRB within the cluster, and find that FRB 20200120E is located 1.92 pc from the center, but within the projected half-light radius. We estimate the relative encounter rate of the FRB host, along with the corresponding rates of 210 other GCs in M81, and compare these values with the encounter rates of Galactic GCs. The FRB resides in a GC with an encounter rate that is moderately higher than the median stellar encounter rate in our two comparison samples. While the estimated encounter rate of the FRB host cluster (e.g., ∼50% of a cluster like 47 Tuc) is sufficient to allow the possibility that the FRB formed dynamically, our results do not place strong constraints on this scenario due to the limitations of the available HST data and the possible systematic uncertainties and selection effects in the comparison data.

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