FRB scattering statistics through the CGM are sensitive to morphology and intermittency
Dylan L. Jow, Calvin Leung

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that FRB scattering timescales are sensitive to the small-scale morphology and intermittency of the circumgalactic medium, offering a new probe for small-scale gas structures.
Contribution
It introduces the tau distribution function (TDF) as a measurable tool to analyze small-scale CGM properties via FRB scattering data.
Findings
TDF is sensitive to gas morphology: spherical, filamentary, or sheet-like.
TDF can distinguish between volumetric and intermittent scattering regimes.
Upcoming observations can use FRBs to probe small-scale CGM structures.
Abstract
The small-scale properties of circumgalactic gas in ordinary galaxies drive its bulk properties: the mass loading of cold neutral gas in galactic outflows affects their bulk momentum; gas cooling processes on small scales affect the spatial distribution of gas in the cool (T~K) circumgalactic medium (CGM). However, hydrodynamical simulations have yet to resolve the CGM on such small scales. Spectroscopy remains our primary probe of the small-scale CGM, with which sub-parsec scales are challenging to resolve. Fast radio bursts (FRBs)--microsecond to millisecond duration radio pulses--are temporally broadened ("scattered") by gradients in the electron density transverse to the line of sight, often generated by fluctuations on the smallest spatial scales. This makes FRB scattering a powerful, complementary, and scalable probe of the small-scale CGM. We show that the distribution of…
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