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Self-modulation of Fast Radio Bursts

Published 16 Oct 2020 in astro-ph.HE | (2010.08282v1)

Abstract: Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are extreme astrophysical phenomena entering the realm of non-linear optics, a field developed in laser physics. A classical non-linear effect is self-modulation. We examine the propagation of FRBs through the circumburst environment using the idealised setup of a monochromatic linearly-polarised GHz wave propagating through a uniform plasma slab of density $N$ at distance $R$ from the source. We find that self-modulation occurs if the slab is located within a critical radius $R_{\rm crit}\sim 10{17}(N/102{\rm\; cm}{-3})(L/10{42}{\rm\; erg\; s}{-1}){\rm\; cm}$, where $L$ is the isotropic equivalent of the FRB luminosity. Self-modulation breaks the burst into pancakes transverse to the radial direction. When $R\lesssim R_{\rm crit}$, the transverse size of the pancakes is smaller than the Fresnel scale. The pancakes are strongly diffracted as the burst exits the slab, and interference between the pancakes produces a frequency modulation of the observed intensity with a sub-GHz bandwidth. When $R\sim R_{\rm crit}$, the transverse size of the pancakes becomes comparable with the Fresnel scale, and the effect of diffraction is weaker. The observed intensity is modulated on a timescale of ten microseconds, which corresponds to the radial width of the pancakes. Our results suggest that self-modulation may cause the temporal and frequency structure observed in FRBs.

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