Physical Society Colloquium
Zooming in on Fast Radio Bursts in Space and Time
Department of Physics McGill University
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are so luminous that we can detect them from distances
of billions of lightyears. They illuminate the otherwise invisible plasma
between stars and galaxies, and yet their origin largely remains a mystery. I
will explain how we can solve this mystery by localising FRBs to their precise
galactic neighbourhoods and by deciphering the properties of these signals at
the highest-possible time and frequency resolution. Given the prolific rate of
FRBs observable from Earth, they are rapidly becoming a unique and powerful tool
for studying the cosmos. What's more, we have still only scratched the surface
in terms of our ability to detect FRB-like signals. With new and enhanced radio
telescopes, we will soon search an even broader parameter space over a vast
range of timescales. This is likely to reveal previously unseen astrophysical
phenomena that will help us probe the extremes of the Universe.
Friday, February 28th, 2025, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (rom 112)
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