Preferential occurrence of fast radio bursts in massive star-forming galaxies

Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration events detected from beyond the Milky Way. FRB emission characteristics favour highly magnetized neutron stars, or magnetars, as the sources1, as evidenced by FRB-like bursts from a galactic magnetar2,3, and the star-forming nature of FRB host galaxies4,5. However, the processes that produce FRB sources remain unknown6. Although galactic magnetars are often linked to core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe)7, it is uncertain what determines which supernovae result in magnetars. The galactic environments of FRB sources can be used to investigate their progenitors. Here, we present the stellar population properties of 30 FRB host galaxies discovered by the Deep Synoptic Array (DSA-110). Our analysis shows a marked deficit of low-mass FRB hosts compared with the occurrence of star formation in the Universe, implying that FRBs are a biased tracer of star formation, preferentially selecting massive star-forming galaxies. This bias may be driven by galaxy metallicity, which is positively correlated with stellar mass8. Metal-rich environments may favour the formation of magnetar progenitors through stellar mergers9,10, as higher-metallicity stars are less compact and more likely to fill their Roche lobes, leading to unstable mass transfer. Although massive stars do not have convective interiors to generate strong magnetic fields by dynamo11, merger remnants are thought to have the requisite internal magnetic-field strengths to result in magnetars11,12. The preferential occurrence of FRBs in massive star-forming galaxies suggests that a core-collapse supernova of merger remnants preferentially forms magnetars.

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Work Title Preferential occurrence of fast radio bursts in massive star-forming galaxies
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Open Access
Creators
  1. Kritti Sharma
  2. Vikram Ravi
  3. Liam Connor
  4. Casey Law
  5. Stella Koch Ocker
  6. Myles Sherman
  7. Nikita Kosogorov
  8. Jakob Faber
  9. Gregg Hallinan
  10. Charlie Harnach
  11. Greg Hellbourg
  12. Rick Hobbs
  13. David Hodge
  14. Mark Hodges
  15. James Lamb
  16. Paul Rasmussen
  17. Jean Somalwar
  18. Sander Weinreb
  19. David Woody
  20. Joel Leja
  21. Shreya Anand
  22. Kaustav Kashyap Das
  23. Yu Jing Qin
  24. Sam Rose
  25. Dillon Z. Dong
  26. Jessie Miller
  27. Yuhan Yao
License In Copyright (Rights Reserved)
Work Type Article
Publisher
  1. Nature
Publication Date November 7, 2024
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
  1. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08074-9
Deposited May 29, 2025

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Version 1
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  • Created
  • Added s41586-024-08074-9.pdf
  • Added Creator Kritti Sharma
  • Added Creator Vikram Ravi
  • Added Creator Liam Connor
  • Added Creator Casey Law
  • Added Creator Stella Koch Ocker
  • Added Creator Myles Sherman
  • Added Creator Nikita Kosogorov
  • Added Creator Jakob Faber
  • Added Creator Gregg Hallinan
  • Added Creator Charlie Harnach
  • Added Creator Greg Hellbourg
  • Added Creator Rick Hobbs
  • Added Creator David Hodge
  • Added Creator Mark Hodges
  • Added Creator James Lamb
  • Added Creator Paul Rasmussen
  • Added Creator Jean Somalwar
  • Added Creator Sander Weinreb
  • Added Creator David Woody
  • Added Creator Joel Leja
  • Added Creator Shreya Anand
  • Added Creator Kaustav Kashyap Das
  • Added Creator Yu Jing Qin
  • Added Creator Sam Rose
  • Added Creator Dillon Z. Dong
  • Added Creator Jessie Miller
  • Added Creator Yuhan Yao
  • Published
  • Updated