4.7 Article

Scintillation arc brightness and electron density for an analytical noodle model

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 489, Issue 3, Pages 3692-3709

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stz2364

Keywords

magnetic reconnection; scattering; ISM: structure; pulsars: individual: B0834+06

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We show that narrow filaments or sheets of over- or underdense plasma, or 'noodles,' with fluctuations of scattering phase of less than a radian, can form the scintillation arcs seen for many pulsars. The required local fluctuations of electron density are indefinitely small. We assume a cosine profile for the electron column and find the scattered field by analytic Kirchhoff integration. For a large electron column, corresponding to large amplitude of phase variation, the stationary-phase approximation is accurate; we call this regime 'ray optics'. For smaller amplitude phase variation, the stationary-phase approximation is inaccurate or inapplicable; we call this regime 'wave optics'. We show that scattering is most efficient when the width of the strip equals that of one pair of Fresnel zones, and in the wave-optics regime. We show that the resolution of present observations is about 100 Fresnel zones on the scattering screen. Incoherent superposition of strips within a resolution element tends to increase the scattered field. We find that observations match a single noodle per resolution element with phase of up to 12 radians; or many noodles per resolution element with arbitrarily small phase variation each, for net phase of less than a radian. Observations suggest a minimum radius for noodles of about 650 km, comparable to the ion inertial scale or the ion cyclotron radius in the scattering plasma.

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