GeminiFocus April 2017 | Page 8

observing time with very little cloud cover and excellent see- ing (for the imaging). Unlike the nights lost to weather in classi- cal observing, we obtained our data with the required sensi- tivity despite uncooperative weather over Maunakea. Figure 3. Top panel: GMOS-N spectrum of the FRB host galaxy (dark blue line) shows prominent [OIII] and H-alpha emission lines. Other emission lines are also marked. The pink line shows a neighboring Galactic star. Side panel: An i-band image of the host galaxy and the neighboring star. The galaxy is slightly extended compared to the seeing and is well fit with a Gaussian profile. Figures adapted from Tendulkar et al., 2017. 6 Results The Gemini-North imaging and spectroscop- ic observations revealed that FRB 121102 was hosted in a low-metallicity star-forming dwarf galaxy at a redshift of z = 0.19273(8) — the first incontrovertible proof that FRB 121102 is at a cosmological distance (Fig- ure 3; Tendulkar et al., 2017). The redshift is consistent with the z < 0.3 redshift that was estimated from the excess DM for this FRB. If thi