Physical Society Colloquium
A Synoptic View of Fast Radio Bursts with CHIME
Physics Department MIT
For more than a decade, enigmatic extragalactic flashes called fast radio
bursts (FRBs) have defied a definitive explanation for their origin. In
addition, the unique properties of FRBs make them promising probes of both
cosmology and the distribution of gas on intergalactic scales. The Canadian
Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) is the only radio telescope
capable of instantaneously observing hundreds of square degrees with the
sensitivity of a 100-meter scale aperture. As a result, its transient search
instrument, CHIME/FRB, has detected thousands of FRBs, increasing the known
sample by an order of magnitude. I will give an overview of CHIME/FRB's most
recent results, where observations of particular sources and statistical
analyses of the FRB population are starting to reveal the nature of this
mysterious phenomenon. I will then describe an effort to augment CHIME/FRB's
capabilities by adding Outrigger telescopes, which will be located across
North America and will precisely localize FRB sources using very long
baseline interferometry. The resulting large sample of localized FRBs will
allow for detailed measurements of the large-scale distribution of baryons
in the universe, providing precise constraints on feedback processes in
galaxy evolution.
Friday, March 31st 2023, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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