The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2023)

Deep Synoptic Array Science: Implications of Faraday Rotation Measures of Fast Radio Bursts Localized to Host Galaxies

  • Myles B. Sherman,
  • Liam Connor,
  • Vikram Ravi,
  • Casey Law,
  • Ge Chen,
  • Kritti Sharma,
  • Morgan Catha,
  • Jakob T. Faber,
  • Gregg Hallinan,
  • Charlie Harnach,
  • Greg Hellbourg,
  • Rick Hobbs,
  • David Hodge,
  • Mark Hodges,
  • James W. Lamb,
  • Paul Rasmussen,
  • Jun Shi,
  • Dana Simard,
  • Jean Somalwar,
  • Reynier Squillace,
  • Sander Weinreb,
  • David P. Woody,
  • Nitika Yadlapalli,
  • The Deep Synoptic Array Team

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad0380
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 957, no. 1
p. L8

Abstract

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Faraday rotation measures (RMs) of fast radio bursts (FRBs) offer the prospect of directly measuring extragalactic magnetic fields. We present an analysis of the RMs of 10 as yet nonrepeating FRBs detected and localized to host galaxies with robust redshift measurements by the 63-antenna prototype of the Deep Synoptic Array (DSA-110). We combine this sample with published RMs of 15 localized FRBs, nine of which are repeating sources. For each FRB in the combined sample, we estimate the host-galaxy dispersion measure (DM) contributions and extragalactic RM. We find compelling evidence that the extragalactic components of FRB RMs are often dominated by contributions from the host-galaxy interstellar medium (ISM). Specifically, we find that both repeating and as yet nonrepeating FRBs show a correlation between the host DM and host RM in the rest frame, and we find an anticorrelation between extragalactic RM (in the observer frame) and redshift for nonrepeaters, as expected if the magnetized plasma is in the host galaxy. Important exceptions to the ISM origin include a dense, magnetized circumburst medium in some repeating FRBs, and the intracluster medium of host or intervening galaxy clusters. We find that the estimated ISM magnetic-field strengths, ${\bar{B}}_{| | }$ , are characteristically ∼1–2 μ G larger than those inferred from Galactic radio pulsars. This suggests either increased ISM magnetization in FRB hosts in comparison with the Milky Way, or that FRBs preferentially reside in regions of increased magnetic-field strength within their hosts.

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