The FRB20190520B Sightline Intersects Foreground Galaxy Clusters
Abstract
The repeating fast radio burst FRB20190520B is an anomaly of the FRB population thanks to its high dispersion measure (DM=1205\,pc/cc) despite its low redshift of zfrb=0.241. This excess has been attributed to a large host contribution of DMhost≈ 900\,pc/cc, far larger than any other known FRB. In this paper, we describe spectroscopic observations of the FRB20190520B field obtained as part of the FLIMFLAM survey, which yielded 701 galaxy redshifts in the field. We find multiple foreground galaxy groups and clusters, for which we then estimated halo masses by comparing their richness with numerical simulations. We discover two separate Mhalo >1014\,M galaxy clusters, at z=0.1867 and z=0.2170, respectively, that are directly intersected by the FRB sightline within their characteristic halo radius . Subtracting off their estimated DM contributions as well that of the diffuse intergalactic medium, we estimate a host contribution of DMhost=430+140-220\,pc/cc or DMhost=280+140-170\,pc/cc (observed frame) depending on whether we assume the halo gas extends to r200 or 2× r200. This significantly smaller DMhost -- no longer the largest known value -- is now consistent with Hα emission measures of the host galaxy without invoking unusually high gas temperatures. Combined with the observed FRB scattering timescale, we estimate the turbulent fluctuation and geometric amplification factor of the scattering layer to be F G≈4.5 - 11\,(pc2\;km)-1/3, suggesting most of the gas is close to the FRB host. This result illustrates the importance of incorporating foreground data for FRB analyses, both for understanding the nature of FRBs and to realize their potential as a cosmological probe.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.