In summer 2022, astronomers detected the most powerful fast radio burst (FRB) ever observed. And coming from a location that dates halfway back to the Big Bang, it also was the farthest known FRB spotted to date.
Now, astronomers led by Northwestern University have pinpointed the extraordinary objects birthplace and its rather curious, indeed.
Using images from NASAs Hubble Space Telescope, the researchers traced the FRB back to not one galaxy but a group of at least seven galaxies. The galaxies in the collection appear to be interacting with one another perhaps even on the path to a potential merger. Such groups of galaxies are rare and possibly led to conditions that triggered the FRB.
The unexpected finding might challenge scientific models of how FRBs are produced and what produces them.
Without the Hubbles imaging, it would still remain a mystery as to whether this FRB originated from one monolithic galaxy or from some type of interacting system, said Northwesterns Alexa Gordon, who led the study. Its these types of environments these weird ones that drive us toward a better understanding of the mystery of FRBs.
Gordon will present this research during the 243rd meeting of the American Astronomical Society in New Orleans, Louisiana. Revealing the Environment of the Most Distant Fast Radio Burst with the Hubble Space Telescope will take place at 2:15 p.m. CST on Tuesday (Jan. 9) as a part of a session on High-Energy Phenomena and Their Origins. Reporters can register here.
Gordon is a graduate student in astronomy at Northwesterns Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, where she is advised by study co-author Wen-fai Fong, an associate professor of physics and astronomy. Fong and Gordon also are members of the Center for Interdisciplinary Exploration and Research in Astrophysics (CIERA).
Flaring up and disappearing within milliseconds, FRBs are brief, powerful radio blasts that generate more energy in one quick burst than our sun emits in an entire year. And the record-breaking FRB (dubbed FRB 20220610A) was even more extreme than its predecessors.
Not only was it four times more energetic than closer FRBs, it also clocked in as the most distant FRB yet discovered. When FRB 20220610A originated, the universe was just 5 billion years old. (For comparison, the universe is now 13.8 billion years old.)
In early observations, the burst appeared to have originated near an unidentifiable, amorphous blob, which astronomers initially thought was either a single, irregular galaxy or a group of three distant galaxies. But, in a new twist, the Hubbles sharp images now suggest the blob might be as least as many as seven galaxies in incredibly close proximity to one another. In fact, the galaxies are so close to one another that they could all fit inside our own Milky Way.
There are some signs that the group members are interacting, Fong said. In other words, they could be trading materials or possibly on a path to merging. These groups of galaxies (called compact groups) are incredibly rare environments in the universe and are the densest galaxy-scale structures we know of.
This interaction could trigger bursts of star formation, Gordon said. That might indicate that the progenitor of FRB 20220610A is associated with a fairly recent population of stars which matches what weve learned from other FRBs.
Despite hundreds of FRB events discovered to date, only a fraction of those have been pinpointed to their host galaxies, said study co-author Yuxin (Vic) Dong, an NSF Graduate Research Fellow, astronomy Ph.D. student in Fongs lab and member of CIERA. Within that small fraction, only a few came from a dense galactic environment, but none have ever been seen in such a compact group. So, its birthplace is truly rare.
Although astronomers have uncovered up to 1,000 FRBs since first discovering them in 2007, the sources behind the blinding flashes remain stubbornly uncertain. While astronomers have yet to reach a consensus on the possible mechanisms behind FRBs, they generally agree that FRBs must involve a compact object, such as a black hole or neutron star.
By revealing the true nature of FRBs, astronomers not only could learn about the mysterious phenomena but also about the true nature of the universe itself. When radio waves from FRBs finally meet our telescopes, they have traveled for billions of years from the distant, early universe. During this cross-universe odyssey, they interact with material along the way.
Radio waves, in particular, are sensitive to any intervening material along the line of sight from the FRB location to us, Fong said. That means the waves have to travel through any cloud of material around the FRB site, through its host galaxy, across the universe and finally through the Milky Way. From a time delay in the FRB signal itself, we can measure the sum of all of these contributions.
To continue to probe FRBs and their origins, astronomers need to detect and study more of them. And with technology continually becoming more sensitive, Gordon says more detections potentially even capturing incredibly faint FRBs are right around the corner.
With a larger sample of distant FRBs, we can begin to study the evolution of FRBs and their host properties by connecting them to more nearby ones and perhaps even start to identify more strange populations, Dong said.
In the near future, FRB experiments will increase their sensitivity, leading to an unprecedented rate in the number of FRBs detected at these distances, Gordon said. Astronomers will soon learn just how special the environment of this FRB was.
The study, A fast radio burst in a compact galaxy group at z ~ 1, was supported by the National Science Foundation (award numbers AST-1909358, AST-2047919 and AST-2308182), the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Research Corporation for Science Advancement and NASA (award number GO-17277). Astronomers first detected FRB 20220610A with the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder radio telescope in Western Australia and then confirmed its origin with the European Southern Observatorys Very Large Telescope in Chile.
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