AGILE observations of a sample of repeating Fast Radio Burst sources

Abstract

Fast Radio Bursts are millisecond-duration bursts originating from distant sources. They are classified into two categories: non-repeating FRBs, which manifest as singular events, and repeating FRBs, which emit multiple bursts over time In this work, we report a search for X- and Gamma-ray counterparts to a selected sample of R-FRBs using data from the Agile satellite. The sample focused on sources with an excess dispersion measure below 300 \, pc \, cm-3. The analysis focused on the bursts covered by AGILE Mini-Calorimeter high resolution data. No astrophysical signals were identified, and we derived upper limits on the flux above 400 keV for the associated sources adopting a spectral magnetar model, one of the leading models for FRB emission. Moreover, for a single burst of FRB 20200120E we estimated the flux UL from the SuperAGILE detector data in the 18-60 keV. We performed also a check of the GRID coverage for each burst in the 0.03 - 10 GeV energy band on short timescales, from 10 to 103 s, and on longer ones including the complete 17 years AGILE/GRID archive. We then considered the famous event FRB 200428 from the galactic magnetar SGR 1935+2154 as reference to extrapolate a possible X-ray emission in MCAL and SuperAGILE bands, from the radio energies of R-FRBs using the EX/Eradio of FRB 200428 as fixed parameter. We compared these energies with historical magnetar X-ray bursts rescaled in the same bands. Our observations set useful constraints on the FRB magnetar model in particular, the MCAL ULs are currently the most stringent in the 0.4--30 MeV band

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