The Scintillating Tail of Comet C/2020 F3 (Neowise)
R.A. Fallows, B. Forte, M. Mevius, M. A. Brentjens, C. G. Bassa, M. M., Bisi, A. Offringa, G. Shaifullah, C. Tiburzi, H. Vedantham, and P. Zucca

TL;DR
This study used LOFAR to observe radio source scintillation caused by comet C/2020 F3's plasma tail, revealing strong, structured turbulence and velocity shear, providing insights into tail plasma dynamics.
Contribution
First detailed observation of scintillation caused by a comet's plasma tail, demonstrating the tail's impact on radio wave propagation and revealing plasma filament structures.
Findings
Detected strong scintillation enhancement at tail boundaries
Observed periodic variations possibly linked to plasma filaments
Measured a sharp decrease in tail material velocity indicating turbulence
Abstract
Context. The occultation of a radio source by the plasma tail of a comet can be used to probe structure and dynamics in the tail. Such occultations are rare, and the occurrence of scintillation, due to small-scale density variations in the tail, remains somewhat controversial. Aims. A detailed observation taken with the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) of a serendipitous occultation of the compact radio source 3C196 by the plasma tail of comet C/2020 F3 (Neowise) is presented. 3C196 tracked almost perpendicularly behind the tail, providing a unique profile cut only a short distance downstream from the cometary nucleus itself. Methods. Interplanetary scintillation (IPS) is observed as the rapid variation of the intensity received of a compact radio source due to density variations in the solar wind. IPS in the signal received from 3C196 was observed for five hours, covering the full transit…
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