论文标题
第一次重复快速无线电爆发的大量黑洞或类似物?
Wandering Massive Black Holes or Analogs of the First Repeating Fast Radio Burst?
论文作者
论文摘要
发现持续的无线电源与第一次重复快速无线电爆发,FRB 121102相吻合,并从其矮人主机银河系的中心偏移,已被用作与年轻的毫秒毫秒的磁铁的证据,与超浮光的超级新星(SLSNE)或长期持续的gamma-ray-ray ray(lgrbs)(lgrbs)。这种情况的一个预测是,紧凑的无线电源抵消了矮星系中心的,至少可以作为至少一些FRB的路标。最近,Reines等。 2019年在附近发现了20种此类无线电来源($ z \ Lessim 0.055 $)矮星系,并认为这些无线电源无法通过HII地区的发射,正常的超新星残留物或正常无线电无线电诺维生来解释这些无线电。相反,它们将排放归因于积聚大规模的黑洞。在这里,我们探索了这些源是FRB 121102的类似物的替代可能性。我们比较它们的特性 - 无线电发光,光谱能量分布,光曲线,无线电与光学通量的比率和空间偏移量和FRB 121102(FRB 121102),与其他良好的frb和潜在相关的系统相同,并且是从这些良好相关的系统中,并且是一致的,并且是从这些良好的系统中找到的。我们进一步将它们的性质与用于解释FRB 121102的磁星云模型,以及理论上的离轴LGRB光曲线,并找到整体一致性。最后,我们发现相对于重复的FRB和LGRB的发生率一致。我们概述了关键的后续观测值,以进一步测试这些可能的连接。
The discovery of a persistent radio source coincident with the first repeating fast radio burst, FRB 121102, and offset from the center of its dwarf host galaxy has been used as evidence for a link with young millisecond magnetars born in superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) or long-duration gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs). A prediction of this scenario is that compact radio sources offset from the centers of dwarf galaxies may serve as signposts for at least some FRBs. Recently, Reines et al. 2019 presented the discovery of 20 such radio sources in nearby ($z\lesssim 0.055$) dwarf galaxies, and argued that these cannot be explained by emission from HII regions, normal supernova remnants, or normal radio supernovae. Instead, they attribute the emission to accreting wandering massive black holes. Here, we explore the alternative possibility that these sources are analogs of FRB 121102. We compare their properties -- radio luminosities, spectral energy distributions, light curves, ratios of radio-to-optical flux, and spatial offsets -- to FRB 121102, a few other well-localized FRBs, and potentially related systems, and find that these are all consistent as arising from the same population. We further compare their properties to the magnetar nebula model used to explain FRB 121102, as well as to theoretical off-axis LGRB light curves, and find overall consistency. Finally, we find a consistent occurrence rate relative to repeating FRBs and LGRBs. We outline key follow-up observations to further test these possible connections.