A 4200-hour campaign on FRB 20240114A finds that the highest-energy bursts account for most of the observed radio energy release, with a break in the energy distribution at ~2×10^40 erg and a linear DM rise of +0.96 pc cm^{-3} over 318 days.
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3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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citation-polarity summary
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astro-ph.HE 3years
2026 3roles
background 1polarities
unclear 1representative citing papers
Matching FRB QPOs to crustal modes constrains the neutron star mass to 1.00-1.76 solar masses, radius to ~13 km, and nuclear symmetry energy slope L to 59.5-96.8 MeV.
A reported periodic fast radio burst is reclassified as Galactic pulsar emission due to CHIME calibration and beam-pointing error.
citing papers explorer
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A 4200-hour HyperFlash and \'ECLAT campaign on the hyperactive FRB 20240114A: constraining energetics with the most brilliant bursts
A 4200-hour campaign on FRB 20240114A finds that the highest-energy bursts account for most of the observed radio energy release, with a break in the energy distribution at ~2×10^40 erg and a linear DM rise of +0.96 pc cm^{-3} over 318 days.
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Estimation of neutron star mass and radius of FRB 20240114A by identification of crustal oscillations
Matching FRB QPOs to crustal modes constrains the neutron star mass to 1.00-1.76 solar masses, radius to ~13 km, and nuclear symmetry energy slope L to 59.5-96.8 MeV.
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A series of unfortunate events: CHIME/FRB misclassification of a Galactic pulsar as a periodic fast radio burst
A reported periodic fast radio burst is reclassified as Galactic pulsar emission due to CHIME calibration and beam-pointing error.