Why Do Compact Active Galactic Nuclei at High Redshift Scintillate Less?
J. Y. Koay, J.-P. Macquart, B. J. Rickett, H. E. Bignall, D. L., Jauncey, T. Pursimo, C. Reynolds, J. E. J. Lovell, L. Kedziora-Chudczer, R., Ojha

TL;DR
This study investigates why high-redshift compact AGNs scintillate less by analyzing frequency-dependent interstellar scintillation data, ruling out IGM scatter broadening and highlighting the role of source spectral index evolution and cosmological effects.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel analysis method that accounts for selection effects and provides new constraints on IGM scatter broadening's impact on AGN scintillation at high redshift.
Findings
Redshift dependence of ISS is partly due to spectral index steepening.
No significant evidence of IGM scatter broadening affecting ISS.
Upper limit of IGM scatter broadening is < 110 microarcseconds at 4.9 GHz.
Abstract
The fraction of compact active galactic nuclei (AGNs) that exhibit interstellar scintillation (ISS) at radio wavelengths, as well as their scintillation amplitudes, have been found to decrease significantly for sources at redshifts z > 2. This can be attributed to an increase in the angular sizes of the \muas-scale cores or a decrease in the flux densities of the compact \muas cores relative to that of the mas-scale components with increasing redshift, possibly arising from (1) the space-time curvature of an expanding Universe, (2) AGN evolution, (3) source selection biases, (4) scatter broadening in the ionized intergalactic medium (IGM) and intervening galaxies, or (5) gravitational lensing. We examine the frequency scaling of this redshift dependence of ISS to determine its origin, using data from a dual-frequency survey of ISS of 128 sources at 0 < z < 4. We present a novel method…
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