Precision orbital dynamics from interstellar scintillation arcs for PSR J0437-4715
Daniel J. Reardon, William A. Coles, Matthew Bailes, N. D. Ramesh, Bhat, Shi Dai, George B. Hobbs, Matthew Kerr, Richard N. Manchester, Stefan, Oslowski, Aditya Parthasarathy, Christopher J. Russell, Ryan M. Shannon,, Renee Spiewak, Lawrence Toomey, Artem V. Tuntsov

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how interstellar scintillation arc analysis over 16 years enables precise measurements of pulsar binary orbits and interstellar medium properties, improving pulsar timing and gravitational tests.
Contribution
It introduces a method to use scintillation arc curvature variations for accurate orbital and scattering medium parameters, surpassing traditional scintillation timescale modeling.
Findings
Identified two scattering screens at 89.8 and 124 pc from Earth.
Measured pulsar orbital inclination as 137.1 degrees.
Derived scattering medium parameters and improved orbital geometry understanding.
Abstract
Intensity scintillations of radio pulsars are known to originate from interference between waves scattered by the electron density irregularities of interstellar plasma, often leading to parabolic arcs in the two-dimensional power spectrum of the recorded dynamic spectrum. The degree of arc curvature depends on the distance to the scattering plasma and its transverse velocity with respect to the line-of-sight. We report the observation of annual and orbital variations in the curvature of scintillation arcs over a period of 16 years for the bright millisecond pulsar, PSR J0437-4715. These variations are the signature of the relative transverse motions of the Earth, pulsar, and scattering medium, which we model to obtain precise measurements of parameters of the pulsar's binary orbit and the scattering medium itself. We observe two clear scintillation arcs in most of our 5000…
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