Brilliant Pebbles: A Method for Detection of Very Large Interstellar Grains

Abstract

A photon of wavelength lambda ~1 micron interacting with a dust grain of radius ap ~ 1 mm (a "pebble") undergoes scattering in the forward direction, largely within a small characteristic diffraction angle thetas ~ lambda/ap ~ 100". Though mm-size dust grains contribute negligibly to the interstellar medium's visual extinction, the signal they produce in scattered light may be detectable, especially for variable sources. Observations of light scattered at small angles allows for the direct measurement of the large grain population; variable sources can also yield tomographic information of the interstellar medium's mass distribution. The ability to detect brilliant pebble halos require a careful understanding of the instrument PSF.

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