Towards precision astrometry of scattered images of compact radio sources: scintillometry theory and prospects
Dylan L. Jow, Delon Shen

TL;DR
This paper develops a new theoretical framework for scintillometry of compact radio sources, enabling detailed astrometric analysis of scintillation data to probe the interstellar and circumgalactic media.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach linking the spatial wavefield to scintillation observables, facilitating full astrometric reconstructions for FRB and pulsar scintillometry.
Findings
Framework relates wavefield to dynamic spectrum
Discusses degeneracy mitigation in two-screen scattering
Explores inferring dispersion measure gradients in CGM
Abstract
Compact radio sources such as pulsars and FRBs undergo scintillation in the interstellar medium (ISM) when scattered images interfere at the observer. ``Scintillometry'' refers to the range of techniques to extract astrometric information -- such as the angular positions of the images and distances to the scattering screen and source -- from scintillation observations. Pulsar scintillometry has proven to be a powerful technique, revealing rich and unexpected scattering phenomenology in the ISM and also shedding light on the emission physics of pulsars. FRB scintillometry stands to be a similarly powerful probe of FRB emission, as well as structure on tiny scales in ionized media beyond our galaxy, such as the circumgalactic medium (CGM). However, nascent FRB scintillation studies are far from the sophisticated lensing geometry reconstructions that have been performed for scintillating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
