Astronomers detect most distant fast radio burst ever

Stephanie Baum
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor
![RGB composite NIRCam image and spectrum of the FRB host galaxy at 饾懅spec = 2.148卤0.001. A) The image in the top left provides a larger-scale view of the field. B) The image in the top right shows a 4.6鈥测裁4.6鈥测 NIRCam image cutout with a 0.28"脳0.48鈥测 localization uncertainty (dashed white circle) for the FRB position. The green cross marks the FRB鈥檚 best-fit position. The IFS field of view is outlined by the purple square, encompassing the host. C) The various panels display cutouts of the NIRCam RGB image of the host galaxy. [OIII5007], H饾浖, and white-light images extracted from the IFS data, show the presence of star-forming emission at the FRB location. Credit: arXiv (2025). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2508.01648 Astronomers detect most distant fast radio burst ever](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800a/2025/astronomers-detect-mos.jpg)
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) last around a millisecond, and in doing so, encode otherwise unattainable information on the plasma which permeates our universe, providing insights into magnetic fields and gas distributions.
In a paper authored by Manisha Caleb and colleagues from the University of Sydney and other institutions, the team reports upon the discovery of FRB 20240304B, which lies at a redshift of 2.148 +/- 0.001, corresponding to just 3 billion years after the Big Bang.
The research is on the arXiv preprint server.
The burst, designated FRB 20240304B, was first detected on March 4, 2024, by South Africa's MeerKAT radio telescope array. What makes this discovery extraordinary is its incredible distance, at a whopping redshift of z = 2.148卤0.001, or about 3 billion years after the Big Bang. This means we're observing light that has traveled for over 11 billion years to reach Earth.
Finding the source of the signal required detective work across multiple observatories. The authors attempted to locate FRB 20240304B's host galaxy using ground-based observatories and archival data but this came up short. However, follow-ups with JWST's NIRCam and NIRSpec instruments succeeded in revealing the FRB's host galaxy and obtaining a spectroscopic redshift.
The burst of radio waves traveled through space, and as it did, it dispersed at a rate of approximately 2,330 pc cm鈦宦, immediately suggesting an extremely distant origin. This measurement more accurately described how much the radio signal was stretched and delayed by free electrons in space, acting like a fingerprint that reveals the vast distances the signal traveled.
This discovery doubles the redshift reach of localized FRBs and probes ionized baryons across ~80% of the history of the universe. Previous FRB detections had only reached back about halfway through cosmic time, but FRB 20240304B pushes our observational boundary to when the universe was still in its youth.
The host galaxy itself tells an interesting story. FRB 20240304B was detected with the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa and researchers localized the signal to a low-mass, clumpy, star-forming galaxy using the James Webb Space Telescope. This young, actively star-forming galaxy provides crucial clues about the origins of these mysterious bursts.
Since its host galaxy is relatively young, not very massive, and still forming stars, the presence of an FRB suggests an origin that can occur over relatively short timescales, such as young magnetars. This supports theories that FRBs originate from highly magnetized neutron stars called magnetars, rather than from processes requiring billions of years to develop.
The discovery also reveals complex magnetic field structures spanning gigaparsec scales. Its sightline, with the Virgo Cluster and a foreground group, reveals magnetic field complexity over many gigaparsec scales. As the radio waves traveled to Earth, they passed through various structures, each leaving its signature on the signal.
Perhaps most remarkably, the observations establish FRB activity during the peak of star formation and demonstrate that FRBs can probe galaxy formation during the most active era in cosmological history. The epoch when FRB 20240304B originated corresponds to when the universe was forming stars at its most furious rate, a period astronomers call "cosmic noon."
As next-generation telescopes come online, discoveries like FRB 20240304B point toward an exciting future where these fleeting signals become messengers from the universe's distant past, helping us understand how the universe evolved from its early, chaotic youth into the structured cosmos we see today.
More information: Manisha Caleb et al, A fast radio burst from the first 3 billion years of the Universe, arXiv (2025).
Journal information: arXiv
Provided by Universe Today