A repeating fast radio burst from an extreme environment


New detections of radio waves from a repeating fast radio burst have revealed an astonishingly potent magnetic field in the source's environment, indicating that it is situated near a massive black hole or within a nebula of unprecedented power.

A repeating fast radio burst from an extreme environment
The 100-meter Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia is shown amid a starry night. A flash from the Fast Radio Burst 
source FRB 121102 is seen traveling toward the telescope. The burst shows a complicated structure, with multiple 
bright peaks; these may be created by the burst emission process itself or imparted by the intervening plasma near
 the source. This burst was detected using a new recording system developed by the Breakthrough Listen project 
[Credit: Danielle Futselaar, Shutterstock]
The findings by an international team of astronomers, including Victoria Kaspi and Shriharsh Tendulkar of McGill University, are published in the journal Nature and are highlighted on the cover of the journal.

A year ago, the astronomers pinpointed the location of the enigmatic fast radio burst (FRB) source named FRB 121102 and reported that it lies in a star-forming region of a dwarf galaxy more than 3 billion light years from Earth. The vast distance to the source implies that it releases an enormous amount of energy in each burst -- roughly as much energy in a single millisecond as the Sun releases in an entire day.

Now, using data from the Arecibo Observatory (Puerto Rico) and the Green Bank Telescope (West Virginia), the researchers have shown that the radio bursts from FRB121102 are highly polarized. The behavior of this polarized emission enables scientists to probe the source's environment in a new way.

Twisted polarization

When polarized radio waves pass through a region with a magnetic field, the polarization gets ``twisted'' by an effect known as Faraday rotation: the stronger the magnetic field, the greater the twisting. The amount of twisting observed in FRB 121102's radio bursts is among the largest ever measured in a radio source, leading the researchers to conclude that the bursts are passing through an extraordinarily strong magnetic field in a dense plasma.