Scintillation as a probe of the intergalactic medium

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Abstract

Most of the baryons in the low-redshift Universe reside in a warm/hot component which is difficult to detect with standard absorption/emission-line techniques. We propose to use quasar refractive scintillation as a useful, complementary probe for such ionized, intergalactic gas. In particular, an application to the case of the intracluster medium is presented. We show that clusters located at z ≈ 0.02 should produce a source rms intensity fluctuation at 50-100 GHz of several tens of per cent and on time-scales ranging from days to months, depending on the projected location of the source on the foreground cluster. However, in order to produce such a signal, the source needs to be very compact. This effect, if observed, can be used as an independent test of the baryonic mass fraction in clusters.

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Ferrara, A., & Perna, R. (2001). Scintillation as a probe of the intergalactic medium. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 325(4), 1643–1648. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.2001.04573.x

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