What is Dispersion Measure and How is it Used in Astrophysics?

AI Thread Summary
Dispersion measure (DM) is defined as the total column density of free electrons between an observer and a pulsar, measured in units of pc/cm^3. This unit facilitates calculations involving distance to celestial objects, as it separates parsecs from the inverse area dimension. The discussion clarifies that DM is distinct from velocity dispersion, which measures the mean velocity of galaxies and clusters. The confusion arises from the terminology, but the focus remains on understanding DM rather than velocity-related concepts. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the importance of precise language in astrophysical discussions.
nenyan
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I read some papers on astrophysics and they discussed dispersion measure.
Is there any theoretic meaning of dispersion measure? And what does the unit pc/cm^3 mean?
 
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1pc/cm^3 = 30.857×10^21 m^−2
So there is 30*10^21 electrons per m^2?

Why we use pc/cm^3 instead of m^-2?
 
You can use any units you like as like as you are representing the same quantity.
The dimensions are inverse area - astronomers keep the "parsecs" separated out to make calculations using DM, which will involve dividing by the distance to a star (in parsecs), easier to do.
 
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Simon Bridge said:
You can use any units you like as like as you are representing the same quantity.
The dimensions are inverse area - astronomers keep the "parsecs" separated out to make calculations using DM, which will involve dividing by the distance to a star (in parsecs), easier to do.

Thank you for your reply.
 
Hello Nenyan,

Is it speaking of just dispersion or velocity dispersion using 'sigma?' Velocity dispersion is used to measure the mean velocity of galaxy and clusters. So which one it is?
 
shounakbhatta said:
Hello Nenyan,

Is it speaking of just dispersion or velocity dispersion using 'sigma?' Velocity dispersion is used to measure the mean velocity of galaxy and clusters. So which one it is?
There are some clues in the first post that tell you which was meant... i.e the word "measure" instead of "velocity" with the word "dispersion" but that could have been a mistake so looking further ... there's the units asked about in connection to dispersion measure as well (what are the units of velocity dispersion?) ... then there is the fact that he didn't immediately reply with "no no no that's not the one I meant" after my answer ;)

Note: as you know, in English, some nouns can have two words.
The sentence "what is dispersion measure?" is different from "what does dispersion measure?"
In the first case, "measure" is part of the noun.

To avoid this sort of confusion, one places the noun in quotes when asking about it:
"What is 'dispersion measure'?"
 
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