Title: Scintillation in Extragalactic Radio Sources
1Scintillation in Extragalactic Radio Sources
- Marco Bondi
- Istituto di Radioastronomia CNR Bologna, Italy
2References
- Conference Proceedings Review Papers
- AIP 74 Radio Wave Scattering in the
Interstellar Medium 1988, Eds J.M. Cordes, B.J.
Rickett D.C. Backer - IAU Colloquium 182 Sources and Scintillations
Refraction and Scattering in Radio Astronomy
2001, Eds R. Strom - Rickett 1990, Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys.
- Papers
- Bondi et al. 1994, AA 287, 390
- Blandford, Narayan Romani 1986, ApJL 301, 53
- Dennett-Thorpe De Bruyn 2000, ApJL 529, 65
- Ferrara Perna 2001, MNRAS 325, 1643
- Heeschen Rickett 1987, AJ 93, 589
- Padrielli et al 1987, AASS 67, 63
- Rickett et al. 1995, AA 293, 479
- Rickett et al. 2000, ApJL 550, 11
- Spangler et al. 1993, AA 267, 213
- Walker 1998, MNRAS 294, 307
3Outline
- Introduction
- Density and intensity fluctuations
- Scintillation Jargon
- Scintillation regimes weak, diffractive,
refractive - Low frequency variability
- Flickering and Intra-Day variability
- Intergalactic scintillation
4Introduction
- Electromagnetic waves from an extragalactic radio
source pass through several ionized media the
intergalactic gas, the interstellar medium, the
interplanetary medium and the ionosphere. In all
these cases, the turbulent plasma produces a
phase modulation of the wavefront and scattering. -
- This produces a wide variety of observed
phenomena such as intensity scintillation,
angular broadening and pulse smearing. - The study of these phenomena provides information
on the angular size of the scattered sources and
a unique method for the remote analysis of
astrophysical plasmas.
5Density and Intensity Fluctuations
- Typically it is assumed a power-law spectrum for
the spatial power spectrum of the density
irregularities -
- CN is a strength parameter and q is the wave
number of density fluctuations in the plasma. - This quantity is related to the power spectrum of
intensity fluctuations through the source size
(actually the source visibility in interferometer
observations). - In the case of refractive scintillation we
- have
-
6Scintillation Jargon
- Define the point source scintillation index (rms
fractional intensity fluctuation) - Define the scattering strength
- A relevant quantity in scintillation is the
Fresnel scale (units are cm) - The angular size of the Fresnel scale is given
(in arcseconds) by
7Scintillation Regimes
- Scintillation is divided into weak and strong
according to whether ? is much smaller or greater
than unity. In the strong regime the wavefront is
highly corrugated on scales smaller than the
Fresnel scale, in the weak regime the phase
changes over the Fresnel scale are small. - Assuming a model for the distribution of the
scattering material it is possible to map the
transition frequency ?0 (the frequency at which
?1).
8Weak Scintillation
- The spatial scale for weak intensity variations
is the Fresnel scale rf . For sources with
angular extent greater than ?f the scintillation
patterns from different parts of the source
overlap and smear each other out, eliminating a
detectable variation - For a point source ( ) the following
relations hold - For a source with
9Strong Scintillation Diffractive
- It is an interference effect characterized by
fast, narrow-band variations. The modulation
index is unity for a point source and the
interference fringes have a characteristic
frequency scale - It is necessary to observe with frequency
resolution of ?? or better in order to be
sensitive to diffractive scintillation. - The angular size on which phase changes of order
1 rad are introduced into the wavefront is - The corresponding time-scale is
- For sources with ? ? ?d the modulation index is
reduced to ?d/? and the time-scale for variations
increased by a factor ?/?d . - No recorded examples of diffractive scintillation
of extragalactic sources.
10Strong Scintillation Refractive
- Can be understood in terms of ray-optics and
correspond to lens-like phenomena. - It is characterized by slow, broad-band
variability. - The refractive scale is given by the scattering
disk, much larger than the Fresnel scale, and the
time-scale is correspondingly longer. - Again if ???r the modulation index is reduced by
a factor while the time-scale
increases with
11Low Frequency Variability - I
- Low frequency (lt 1 GHz) variability has been a
puzzling phenomenon in the 70s and 80s. - Variations of the order of 10 on time-scales of
months to years. - Variations could not be explained in terms of
expansion of a synchrotron emitting cloud of
plasma. - Low frequency bursts would imply ? far higher
than those derived from proper motion
measurements
12Low Frequency Variability - II
- Refractive scintillation was proposed as the
mechanism responsible for low frequency
variability dependence of variability on
galactic latitude. - Results from analysis of a 15 years monitoring at
408 MHz coupled with VLBI observations at 610 MHz
to derive the source sizes - Qualitatively and roughly quantitative agreement
between the observed scintillation indices an
time-scales and those derived from a standard
model for interstellar plasma turbulence.
13Low Frequency Variability - III
- The time-scale of variability is determined by
the distance of the effective screen and the
pattern-observer velocity in the plane of the sky
(pattern speed). - Annual modulation in a sample of low frequency
variable. This is interpreted as produced by the
Earth orbital motion around the Sun on the
pattern produced by refractive scintillation. - Sources along the line of sight of the apex show
longer time-scales.
14Low Frequency Variability - IV
- There is no measurable evidence for a finite
propagation speed of the turbulent irregularities
responsible for the refractive scintillation - the scattering medium is extended along the line
of sight. In this case the random velocities of
the density irregularities will not produce any
net motion - the scattering medium is not uniformly
distributed along the line of sight, but it is
localized in a thin screen at a certain distance.
In this case the velocity of the density
irregularities should be low suggesting that they
could be associated with the HII region
envelopes, characterized by a Alfven speed
15Flickering Intra-Day Variability - I
- Low amplitude (1 --5 rms) short time scale (few
hours to days) variability observed in the range
2-20 cm in flat spectrum radio sources. - In some cases the variations can have substantial
amplitude (10-15 ) over few hours (e.g.
0917624). - If intrinsic these variations would imply Lorentz
factors of the order of 100. - Variations are observed also in polarized flux
and position angle.
16Flickering Intra-Day Variability - II
- Refractive interstellar scintillation has been
claimed to be the cause of this phenomena because
of a significant trend of increasing flicker
amplitude with decreasing galactic latitude. - The combination of a steady and variable
component with nearly orthogonal polarisation
angles can produce the observed anticorrelation
of total flux density and polarized flux
17Flickering Intra-Day Variability - III
- Assuming the source diameter is linearly
dependent on wavelength it is possible to
reproduce the amplitude and time scale trends
with wavelength with a reasonable model of RISS. - Annual modulation detected in IDV sources
(0917624, J18193845).
18Scintillation as a Probe of the ICM - I
- Most of the baryons reside in a warm/hot
component which is difficult to detect with
standard absorption/emission line techniques. - Refractive scintillation of a compact quasar
behind a cluster can be used to probe the
intracluster medium. - The cluster will act as a foreground screen
relevant parameters are - radial profile of the cluster mass density
(isothermal ? model) - mass fraction of the gas (0.04 - 0.2)
- distance of the cluster (0.02) and of the quasar
(1.0) - velocity of the inhomogeneities (1000 km/s)
- the size of the quasar
- the impact parameter (depending on its value the
propagation through the cluster can be in the
weak or strong scattering regimes)
19Scintillation as a Probe of the ICM - II