摘要
We report the properties of more than 800 bursts detected from the repeating fast radio burst(FRB)source FRB20201124A with the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope(FAST)during an extremely active episode on UTC 2021 September 25–28 in a series of four papers.In this second paper of the series,we study the energy distribution of 881 bursts(defined as significant signals separated by dips down to the noise level)detected in the first four days of our 19 hr observational campaign spanning 17 days.The event rate initially increased exponentially but the source activity stopped within 24 hr after the 4th day.The detection of 542 bursts in one hour during the fourth day marked the highest event rate detected from one single FRB source so far.The bursts have complex structures in the time-frequency space.We find a double-peak distribution of the waiting time,which can be modeled with two log-normal functions peaking at 51.22 ms and 10.05 s,respectively.Compared with the emission from a previous active episode of the source detected with FAST,the second distribution peak time is smaller,suggesting that this peak is defined by the activity level of the source.We calculate the isotropic energy of the bursts using both a partial bandwidth and a full bandwidth and find that the energy distribution is not significantly changed.We find that an exponentially connected broken-power law function can fit the cumulative burst energy distribution well,with the lower and higher-energy indices being-1.22±0.01 and-4.27±0.23,respectively.Assuming a radio radiative efficiency ofη_(r)=10^(-4),the total isotropic energy of the bursts released during the four days when the source was active is already 3.9×10^(46)erg,exceeding~23%of the available magnetar dipolar magnetic energy.This challenges the magnetar models which invoke an inefficient radio emission(e.g.,synchrotron maser models).
基金
supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(NSFC,Grant Nos.11988101 and 11725313)
supported by the Open Project Program of the Key Laboratory of FAST,Chinese Academy of Sciences
support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China(NSFC,Grant No.U2031117)
the Youth Innovation Promotion Association CAS(id.2021055)
CAS Project for Young Scientists in Basic Research(grant YSBR-006)
the Cultivation Project for FAST Scientific Payoff and Research Achievement of CAMS-CAS
supported by the Key Research Project of Zhejiang Lab No.2021PE0AC0
supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(NSFC,Grant Nos.11988101 and 11833009)
the Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences(Grant No.QYZDJ-SSWSLH021)
supported by the Cultivation Project for the FAST scientific Payoff and Research Achievement of CAMSCAS
supported by National SKA Program of China 2020SKA0120200
National Natural Science Foundation of China(NSFC,Grant No.12041303)
the CAS-MPG LEGACY project
funding from the MaxPlanck Partner Group。