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The Massive and Quiescent Elliptical Host Galaxy of the Repeating Fast Radio Burst FRB20240209A

Authors :
Eftekhari, T.
Dong, Y.
Fong, W.
Shah, V.
Simha, S.
Andersen, B. C.
Andrew, S.
Bhardwaj, M.
Cassanelli, T.
Chatterjee, S.
Coulter, D. A.
Fonseca, E.
Gaensler, B. M.
Gordon, A. C.
Hessels, J. W. T.
Ibik, A. L.
Joseph, R. C.
Kahinga, L. A.
Kaspi, V.
Kharel, B.
Kilpatrick, C. D.
Lanman, A. E.
Lazda, M.
Leung, C.
Liu, C.
Mas-Ribas, L.
Masui, K. W.
Mckinven, R.
Mena-Parra, J.
Miller, A. A.
Nimmo, K.
Pandhi, A.
Pearlman, A. B.
Pleunis, Z.
Prochaska, J. X.
Rafiei-Ravandi, M.
Sammons, M.
Scholz, P.
Shin, K.
Smith, K.
Stairs, I.
Shivraj, P. Swarali
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The discovery and localization of FRB20240209A by the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Fast Radio Burst (CHIME/FRB) experiment marks the first repeating FRB localized with the CHIME/FRB Outriggers and adds to the small sample of repeating FRBs with associated host galaxies. Here we present Keck and Gemini observations of the host that reveal a redshift $z=0.1384\pm0.0004$. We perform stellar population modeling to jointly fit the optical through mid-infrared data of the host and infer a median stellar mass log$(M_*/{\rm M_{\odot}})=11.34\pm0.01$ and a mass-weighted stellar population age $\sim11$Gyr, corresponding to the most massive and oldest FRB host discovered to date. Coupled with a star formation rate $<0.36\,{\rm M_{\odot}\ yr^{-1}}$, the specific star formation rate $<10^{-11.8}\rm\ yr^{-1}$ classifies the host as quiescent. Through surface brightness profile modeling, we determine an elliptical galaxy morphology, marking the host as the first confirmed elliptical FRB host. The discovery of a quiescent early-type host galaxy within a transient class predominantly characterized by late-type star-forming hosts is reminiscent of short-duration gamma-ray bursts, Type Ia supernovae, and ultraluminous X-ray sources. Based on these shared host demographics, coupled with a large offset as demonstrated in our companion paper, we conclude that preferred progenitors for FRB20240209A include magnetars formed through merging binary neutron stars/white dwarfs or the accretion-induced collapse of a white dwarf, or a luminous X-ray binary. Together with FRB20200120E localized to a globular cluster in M81, our findings provide strong evidence that some fraction of FRBs may arise from a process distinct from the core collapse of massive stars.<br />Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures; Submitted to AAS Journals

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2410.23336
Document Type :
Working Paper