Pulsar Scintillation Arcs and the ISM Dan Stinebring Oberlin College Scattering and Scintillation In Radioastronomy Pushchino 19–23 June 2006.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Foundations of Medical Ultrasonic Imaging
Advertisements

SDO/HMI multi-height velocity measurements Kaori Nagashima (MPS) Collaborators: L. Gizon, A. Birch, B. Löptien, S. Danilovic, R. Cameron (MPS), S. Couvidat.
Exam 1 Next Tuesday Covers chapters 1, 2, S1, 4, 5 and 6 2 essay questions/25 multiple choice Allowed one standard sized sheet of notes, writing on one.
The Extreme Dimension: Time-Variability and The Smallest ISM Scales Dan Stinebring Oberlin College.
Searching for Gravitational Waves with Millisecond Pulsars: Dan Stinebring Oberlin College CWRU – May 21, 2009.
Interstellar Levy Flights Levy flights and Turbulence Theory: Stas Boldyrev (U Chicago  Univ Wisconsin ) Collaborators: Pulsars: Ben Stappers (Westerbork:
Radio Telescopes Large metal dish acts as a mirror for radio waves. Radio receiver at prime focus. Surface accuracy not so important, so easy to make.
Galactic Diffuse Gamma-ray Emission, the EGRET Model, and GLAST Science Stanley D. Hunter NASA/GSFC Code 661
The Transient Radio Sky to be Revealed by the SKA Jim Cordes Cornell University AAS Meeting Washington, DC 8 January 2002.
Fundamentals of Radio Astronomy Lyle Hoffman, Lafayette College ALFALFA Undergraduate Workshop Union College, 2005 July 06.
Multipath fading and reflections The signal takes many paths to the destination. The propagation delay along each path is different. How many meters difference.
Microstructure in the Ionized ISM from radio scattering observations. Barney Rickett UC San Diego O’Dell Symposium Lake Geneva WI April 2007.
Chapter 25: Interference and Diffraction
The Transient Universe: AY 250 Spring 2007 Existing Transient Surveys: Radio II: Interferometric Surveys Geoff Bower.
Optical Observations of High- Latitude Clouds Adolf N. Witt University of Toledo.
ElectroScience Lab IGARSS 2011 Vancouver Jul 26th, 2011 Chun-Sik Chae and Joel T. Johnson ElectroScience Laboratory Department of Electrical and Computer.
1 Interpreting SECCHI White Light Images: FOV Sensitivity & Stereo Viewing Paulett Liewer, JPL; Russ Howard & Dennis Socker, NRL SECCHI Consortium Meeting.
1 Arecibo Synergy with GLAST (and other gamma-ray telescopes) Frontiers of Astronomy with the World’s Largest Radio Telescope 12 September 2007 Dave Thompson.
Chapter 5 Light: The Cosmic Messenger Light in Everyday Life Power – describes the rate of energy use. 1 Watt = 1 Joule/sec. Spectrum – The component.
P olarized R adiation I maging and S pectroscopy M ission Probing cosmic structures and radiation with the ultimate polarimetric spectro-imaging of the.
Random Media in Radio Astronomy Atmospherepath length ~ 6 Km Ionospherepath length ~100 Km Interstellar Plasma path length ~ pc (3 x Km)
RTS Manchester Two special radio AGN: BL Lac and J Ger de Bruyn + work with J-P. Macquart ASTRON, Dwingeloo & Kapteyn Institute,
Variability of the Flux Densities of Radio Sources on Timescales Shorter than a Month A.G. Gorshkov 1, V.K.Konnikova 1 M. Mingaliev Sternberg Astronomical.
Remote Sensing of Solar Wind Velocity Applying IPS Technique using MEXART Remote Sensing of Solar Wind Velocity Applying IPS Technique using MEXART Mejía-Ambriz.
15 October Observational Astronomy Direct imaging Photometry Kitchin pp ,
2 & 3D Waves K Warne. CAPS Statements G11 At the end of this section you should be able to.... Diffraction· Define a wavefront as an imaginary line that.
Observations of Intra-Hour Variable Quasars Hayley Bignall (JIVE) Dave Jauncey, Jim Lovell, Tasso Tzioumis (ATNF) Jean-Pierre Macquart (NRAO/Caltech) Lucyna.
8 th EVN Symposium: Exploring the universe with the real-time VLBI. 26 – 29 September 2006.Giuseppe Cimò – JIVE Interstellar Scintillation and IDV Twinkle,
The Small-scale Structures in Interstellar HI: A resolvable puzzle? Avinash A. Deshpande Raman Research Institute, Bangalore (+ K.R. Anantharamaiah, K.S.
What do Scintillations tell us about the Ionized ISM ? Barney Rickett UC San Diego SINS Socorro May 2006.
3C120 R. Craig Walker National Radio Astronomy Observatory Socorro, NM Collaborators: J.M. Benson, S.C. Unwin, M.B. Lystrup, T.R.Hunter, G. Pilbratt, P.E.
The measurement of q 0 If objects are observed at large distances of known brightness (standard candles), we can measure the amount of deceleration since.
Interference & Diffraction. Interference Like other forms of wave energy, light waves also combine with each other Interference only occurs between waves.
Intrinsic Short Term Variability in W3-OH and W49N Hydroxyl Masers W.M. Goss National Radio Astronomy Observatory Socorro, New Mexico, USA A.A. Deshpande,
Investigation of different types radio sources by IPS method at 111MHz S.A.Tyul’bashev Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory, Astro Space Center of P.N.Lebedev.
Using Baryon Acoustic Oscillations to test Dark Energy Will Percival The University of Portsmouth (including work as part of 2dFGRS and SDSS collaborations)
Aristeidis Noutsos University of Manchester. Pulsar Polarization Pulsar radiation is elliptically polarised with a high degree of linear polarization.
Steven R. Spangler, Department of Physics and Astronomy
A Brief discussion of interstellar HI structure with special reference to filaments Gerrit Verschuur Physics Department, University of Memphis.
Scintillation in Extragalactic Radio Sources Marco Bondi Istituto di Radioastronomia CNR Bologna, Italy.
Rotating Radio Transients Maura McLaughlin West Virginia University 12 September 2007.
Gabriele Giovannini Marcello Giroletti Gregory B. Taylor Dipartimento di Astronomia, Bologna University Istituto di Radioastronomia, INAF Bologna Dept.
Latest Results from LSS & BAO Observations Will Percival University of Portsmouth StSci Spring Symposium: A Decade of Dark Energy, May 7 th 2008.
Evidence for Anisotropy and Intermittency in the Turbulent Interstellar Plasma Bill Coles, University of California, San Diego 1. It had been thought that.
Coronal scattering under strong regular refraction Alexander Afanasiev Institute of Solar-Terrestrial Physics Irkutsk, Russia.
A.O. Henrik Olofsson1 EMBRACE Solar Scans 4 th SKADS Workshop, Lisbon, 2-3 October 2008 Sun observations with prototype tile Test carried out at ASTRON.
OH maser sources in W49N: probing differential anisotropic scattering with Zeeman pairs desh Raman Research Institute, Bangalore + Miller Goss, Eduardo.
Parsec-scale Constraints on the ISM From the Millisecond Pulsars in Terzan5 Scott Ransom (NRAO Charlottesville) Fernando Camilo (Columbia) Paulo Freire.
Observed and Simulated Foregrounds for Reionization Studies with the Murchison Widefield Array Nithyanandan Thyagarajan, Daniel Jacobs, Judd Bowman + MWA.
Interstellar turbulent plasma spectrum from multi-frequency pulsar observations Smirnova T. V. Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory Astro Space Center.
Radio Sounding of the Near-Sun Plasma Using Polarized Pulsar Pulses I.V.Chashei, T.V.Smirnova, V.I.Shishov Pushchino Radio Astronomy Obsertvatory, Astrospace.
Gravitational Lensing
Project P2445 – Four-Frequency High Precision Timing of a Millisecond Pulsar Ryan Shannon (PI, Graduate Student, Cornell University), with Jim Cordes,
Interstellar Wave Propagation: Challenges to Precision Timing and How To Overcome Them Mark Walker (Manly Astrophysics)
Universe Tenth Edition Chapter 25 Cosmology: The Origin and Evolution of the Universe Roger Freedman Robert Geller William Kaufmann III.
Today’s Lecture Interference Diffraction Gratings Electron Diffraction
Boston 2009 Patrick Slane (CfA) SNRs and PWNe in the Chandra Era Observations of Pulsar Bowshock Nebulae Collaborators: B. M. Gaensler T. Temim J. D. Gelfand.
Spectrum and small-scale structures in MHD turbulence Joanne Mason, CMSO/University of Chicago Stanislav Boldyrev, CMSO/University of Madison at Wisconsin.
Single Dish Summer School, Green Bank 2007 Things to do with Single Dish: VLBI Tapasi Ghosh NAIC/Arecibo Observatory Outline: Interferometry Basic.
Diffraction scintillation at 1.4 and 4.85GHz V.M.Malofeev, O.I.Malov, S.A.Tyul’bashev PRAO, Russia W.Sieber Hochschule Nederrhein, Germany A.Jessner, R.Wielebinski.
How can we measure turbulent microscales in the Interstellar Medium? Steven R. Spangler, University of Iowa.
Diffraction and Coherence 16-2 and CAN WAVES BEND AROUND CORNERS? ·Can you hear me when I stand around the corner and yell? ·What about light? Think.
Presentation on.  There are many methods for measuring of fiber structure. Such as:  The absorption of infrared radiation  Raman scattering of light.
11.1 – Standing/ Stationary Waves
Chapter 25 Wave Optics.
Interplanetary scintillation of strong sources during the descending phase near the minimum of 23 solar activity cycle Chashei I1., Glubokova1,2 S., Glyantsev1,2.
“Astrometry through beer goggles” Adam Deller Swinburne University
What is the scattering screen in front of quasar PKS B ?
Observational Astronomy
GALACTIC ASTRONOMY (II): PULSARS
Presentation transcript:

Pulsar Scintillation Arcs and the ISM Dan Stinebring Oberlin College Scattering and Scintillation In Radioastronomy Pushchino 19–23 June 2006

Collaborators Bill Coles Jim Cordes Barney Rickett Volodya Shishov Tania Smirnova and many Oberlin College students

Motivations Interstellar inhomogeneity spectrum –Single-dish “imaging” of the ISM on AU size scales on a continuing basis –Imaging the pulsar magnetosphere? Improving high-precision pulsar timing –Reducing the effects of scattering

with ACF

with Secondary Differential Doppler Shift Differential Delay

Some Examples

Normal arc

Normal arc

B

B

B0450–18

B1540– MHz

B

“Deflection of Pulsar Signal Reveals Compact Structures in the Galaxy, ” A. S. Hill et al. 2005, 619, L17

Key Points 1) scintillation arcs are detectable toward most bright pulsars 2) they provide single-dish snapshots of the 2d distribution of scattering material (fov ~ 40 mas;  ~ 4 mas) 3) they scan the sky at the large proper motion rate of most pulsars

Schematic Explanation

Coherent radiation scatters off electron inhomogeneities

Multi-path interference causes a random diffraction pattern

Relative transverse velocities produce a dynamic spectrum time

Scattering in a thin screen plus a simple core/halo model can explain the basics of scintillation arcs

Hierarchy of Power Levels Core-core Core-halo Halo-halo Near origin of SS Main scintillation arc features Too weak to detect Holographic Imaging

Kolmogorov vs. Gaussian PSF How to produce a “core/halo” psf? A Gaussian psf will NOT work: No halo.

Kolmogorov vs. Gaussian PSF Kolmogorov turbulence DOES work It produces a psf with broad wings

More Details …

Secondary spectrum basics

Fringe frequencies V eff

Fringe frequencies V eff DsDs D

Fringe frequencies V eff What if Then So that (point source at the origin) Parabolic arc with a positive definite offset

Fringe frequencies V eff Curvature of the Parabola

Secondary spectrum basics Curvature of the parabola Measure D,, V known Determine screen location

Needed: shallow (Kolmogorov) spectrum and “thin-screen” geometry –2525  x (mas) 640 pc 450 pc

Multiple Screens

Multiple Scintillation Arcs: Each is telling us about a scattering “screen” along the los The curvature of the arc (plus distance and proper motion info) locates the screen along the los Sharp arc boundaries imply thin screens Screen locations are constant over decades of time

Sharpness of Arcs

Effective Velocity Cordes and Rickett 1998, ApJ, 507, 846

velocity plot

Scanning the Sky …

The patchiness MOVES ! Hill, A.S., Stinebring, D.R., et al. 2005, ApJ,619, L171 This is the angular velocity of the pulsar across the sky!

There is considerable bending power in the entities that give rise to the arclet features (a - d). Our estimates: Size ~ 1 AU Density ~ 200 cm -3 Are these the same objects that give rise to ESEs? Hill, A.S., Stinebring, D.R., et al. 2005, ApJ,619, L171

Holographic Imaging (very early stages)

Walker, M.A. & Stinebring, D.R. 2005, MNRAS, 362, 1269 Mark Walker has made substantial progress on finding underlying “scattered wave components” in a secondary spectrum.

It may be possible to form an image of the scattering material in the ISM with milliarcsecond resolution. The searchlight beam that illuminates the medium is swept along by the pulsar proper motion. (Work in progress with Mark Walker and others …)

Summary Comments There are many opportunities for focused observational projects Early stage of interpretation of results: many fundamental puzzles remain! Larger more sensitive telescopes will provide breakthroughs!

Some references Stinebring et al. 2001, ApJ, 549, L97 Hill et al. 2003, ApJ, 599, 457 Hill et al. 2005, ApJ, 619, L17 Walker et al. 2004, MNRAS, 354, 43 Cordes et al. 2006, ApJ, 637, 346 Walker & Stinebring 2005, MNRAS, 362, 1279 Observation Theory