A radio pulsar phase from SGR J1935+2154 provides clues to the magnetar FRB mechanism
Abstract
The megajansky radio burst, FRB 20200428, and other bright radio bursts detected from the Galactic source SGR J1935+2154 suggest that magnetars can make fast radio bursts (FRBs), but the emission site and mechanism of FRB-like bursts are still unidentified. Here, we report the emergence of a radio pulsar phase of the magnetar 5 months after FRB 20200428. Pulses were detected in 16.5 hours over 13 days using the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope, with luminosities of about eight decades fainter than FRB 20200428. The pulses were emitted in a narrow phase window anti-aligned with the x-ray pulsation profile observed using the x-ray telescopes. The bursts, conversely, appear in random phases. This dichotomy suggests that radio pulses originate from a fixed region within the magnetosphere, but bursts occur in random locations and are possibly associated with explosive events in a dynamically evolving magnetosphere. This picture reconciles the lack of periodicity in cosmological repeating FRBs within the magnetar engine model. A pulsar phase from a Galactic-FRB magnetar shows that its FRB bursts and pulsar emission originate differently.
- Publication:
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Science Advances
- Pub Date:
- July 2023
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2307.16124
- Bibcode:
- 2023SciA....9F6198Z
- Keywords:
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- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
- E-Print:
- published on Science Advances, the authors' version