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We report the first radio interferometric search at 843 MHz for fast transients, particularly Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs). The recently recommissioned Swinburne University of Technologys digital backend for the Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope array (the UTMOST) with its large collecting area (18,000 $mathrm{m^2}$) and wide instantaneous field of view (7.80 $mathrm{deg^2}$) is expected to be an efficient tool to detect FRBs. As an interferometer it will be capable of discerning whether the FRBs are truly a celestial population. We show that UTMOST at full design sensitivity can detect an event approximately every few days. We report on 2 preliminary FRB surveys at about 7% and 14% respectively of the arrays final sensitivity. Several pulsars have been detected via single pulses and no FRBs were discovered with pulse widths ($W$), in the range 655.36 $mu$s $< W < 41.9$ ms and dispersion measures (DMs) in the range $100 < $DM$< 2000$ $mathrm{pc,cm^{-3}}$. This non-detection sets a 2$sigma$ upper limit of the sky rate of not more than 1000 events $mathrm{sky^{-1}}$ $mathrm{day^{-1}}$ at 843 MHz down to a flux limit of 11 Jy for 1 ms FRBs. We show that this limit is consistent with previous survey limits at 1.4 GHz and 145 MHz and set a lower limit on the mean spectral index of FRBs of $alpha > -3.2$.
We present Clusterrank, a new algorithm for identifying dispersed astrophysical pulses. Such pulses are commonly detected from Galactic pulsars and rotating radio transients (RRATs), which are neutron stars with sporadic radio emission. More recently
We detail a new fast radio burst (FRB) survey with the Molonglo Radio Telescope, in which six FRBs were detected between June 2017 and December 2018. By using a real-time FRB detection system, we captured raw voltages for five of the six events, whic
Dedicated surveys using different detection pipelines are being carried out at multiple observatories to find more Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs). Understanding the efficiency of detection algorithms and the survey completeness function is important to ena
Although IceCube has discovered a diffuse astrophysical neutrino flux, the underlying sources of these neutrinos remain unknown. Transient astrophysical objects, such as fast radio bursts (FRBs), could explain a large percentage of the measured flux.
We report on a search for radio transients at 340 MHz with the Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) Low band Ionospheric and Transient Experiment (VLITE). Between 2015 July 29 and 2015 September 27, operating in commensal mode, VLITE imaged approximately 28