On the afterglow and progenitor of FRB 150418
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2016
Publication Title
Astrophysical Journal Letters
Volume
822
Issue
1
Abstract
Keane et al. recently detected a fading radio source following FRB 150418, leading to the identification of a putative host galaxy at z = 0.492 ± 0.008. Assuming that the fading source is the afterglow of FRB 150418, I model the afterglow and constrain the isotropic energy of the explosion to be a few 1050 erg, comparable to that of a short-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB). The outflow may have a jet opening angle of ∼0.22 rad, so that the beaming-corrected energy is below 1049 erg. The results rule out most fast radio burst (FRB) progenitor models for this FRB, but may be consistent with either of the following two scenarios. The first scenario invokes a merger of an NS-NS binary, which produced an undetected short GRB and a supra-massive neutron star, which subsequently collapsed into a black hole, probably hundreds of seconds after the short GRB. The second scenario invokes a merger of a compact star binary (BH-BH, NS-NS, or BH-NS) system whose pre-merger dynamical magnetospheric activities made the FRB, which is followed by an undetected short GRB-like transient. The gravitational-wave (GW) event GW 150914 would be a sister of FRB 150418 in this second scenario. In both cases, one expects an exciting prospect of GW/FRB/GRB associations. © 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Keywords
Gamma-ray burst: general; Gravitational waves; Radio continuum: general; Stars: black holes; Stars: neutron
Language
English
Repository Citation
Zhang, B.
(2016).
On the afterglow and progenitor of FRB 150418.
Astrophysical Journal Letters, 822(1),
http://dx.doi.org/10.3847/2041-8205/822/1/L14