Research news on Interstellar scintillation

Interstellar scintillation as a research area investigates the intensity and phase fluctuations of compact radio sources, such as pulsars and quasars, caused by small-scale electron density irregularities in the ionized interstellar medium (ISM). It focuses on characterizing scattering regimes (weak and strong scintillation, diffractive and refractive components), turbulence spectra (e.g., Kolmogorov-like), and spatial, temporal, and frequency decorrelation scales. This field uses scintillation as a probe of ISM microstructure, magnetic fields, and plasma turbulence, and develops theoretical modeling, statistical analysis, and high-time-resolution observations to constrain electron density distributions and improve precision in applications such as pulsar timing and very long baseline interferometry.

A twinkling pulsar reveals invisible structures in space

The twinkling stars in the night sky are not just beautiful to look at. Their flickering reveals something about the varying temperatures and densities in the layers of Earth's atmosphere, which refract the light as it travels ...