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Phased Array Feed (PAF) receivers are at the forefront of modern day radio astronomy. PAFs are currently being developed for spectral line and radio continuum surveys and to search for pulsars and fast radio bursts. Here, we present results of the pilot survey for pulsars and fast radio bursts using the Focal plane L-band Array for the Green Bank Telescope (FLAG) receiver operating in the frequency range of 1.3--1.5 GHz. With a system temperature of $sim$18 K, the receiver provided unprecedented sensitivity to the survey over an instantaneous field of view (FoV) of 0.1 deg$^{2}$. For the survey, we implemented both time and frequency domain search pipelines designed to find pulsars and fast radio bursts that were validated by test pulsar observations. Although no new sources were found, we were able to demonstrate the capability of this instrument from observations of known pulsars. We report an upper limit on the rate of fast radio bursts above a fluence of 0.36~Jy ms to be 1.3 $times$ 10$^6$ events per day per sky. Using population simulations, we show that the FLAG will find a factor of 2--3 more pulsars in same survey duration compared to its single pixel counterpart at the Green Bank Telescope. We also demonstrate that the new phased array receiver, ALPACA for the Arecibo telescope, will be a superior survey instrument and will find pulsars at a higher rate than most contemporary receivers by a factor of 2--10.
The Green Bank Telescope (GBT) is the largest fully steerable radio telescope in the world and is one of our greatest tools for discovering and studying radio pulsars. Over the last decade, the GBT has successfully found over 100 new pulsars through
We have reprocessed a set of observations of 75 bright, unidentified, steep-spectrum polarized radio sources taken with the Green Bank 43-m telescope to find previously undetected sub-millisecond pulsars and radio bursts. The (null) results of the fi
We describe GBTrans, a real-time search system designed to find fast radio bursts (FRBs) using the 20-m radio telescope at the Green Bank Observatory. The telescope has been part of the Skynet educational program since 2015. We give details of the ob
A new 1.4 GHz 19-element, dual-polarization, cryogenic phased array feed (PAF) radio astronomy receiver has been developed for the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) as part of FLAG (Focal L-band Array for the GBT) project. Commissioning obser
We have conducted two pilot surveys for radio pulsars and fast transients with the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) around 140 MHz and here report on the first low-frequency fast-radio burst limit and the discovery of two new pulsars. The first survey, th