Detection of Six Rapidly Scintillating AGNs and the Diminished Variability of J1819+3845
J. Y. Koay, H. E. Bignall, J.-P. Macquart, D. L. Jauncey, B. J., Rickett, J. E. J. Lovell

TL;DR
This study identified six AGNs exhibiting rapid radio scintillation with characteristic times under 2 hours, linking such behavior to nearby scattering regions and analyzing the evolution of scintillation in J1819+3845.
Contribution
The paper presents the first systematic search for rapid scintillators among 128 AGNs and establishes a connection between scintillation timescales and proximity of scattering regions.
Findings
Six rapid scintillators with < 2 hour timescales identified.
Rapid scintillation linked to nearby scattering regions within 250 pc.
J1819+3845's scintillation decreased, indicating a more distant scattering screen.
Abstract
The extreme, intra-hour and > 10% rms flux density scintillation observed in AGNs such as PKS 0405-385, J1819+3845 and PKS 1257-326 at cm wavelengths has been attributed to scattering in highly turbulent, nearby regions in the interstellar medium. Such behavior has been found to be rare. We searched for rapid scintillators among 128 flat spectrum AGNs and analyzed their properties to determine the origin of such rapid and large amplitude radio scintillation. The sources were observed at the VLA at 4.9 and 8.4 GHz simultaneously at two hour intervals over 11 days. We detected six rapid scintillators with characteristic time-scales of < 2 hours, none of which have rms variations > 10%. We found strong lines of evidence linking rapid scintillation to the presence of nearby scattering regions, estimated to be < 12 pc away for ~ 200 muas sources and < 250 pc away for ~ 10 muas sources. We…
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