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Basics Basics Basics Basics of of of of Radio Interferometry

The document discusses the basics of radio interferometry. It begins by explaining the motivation for using radio interferometry due to the limited resolution of single radio telescopes. It then provides an overview of the key concepts of radio interferometry, including how multiple small telescopes can be combined to simulate a larger aperture telescope. The document discusses the two-element interferometer in detail and how the signals from two antennas can be combined. It also covers topics like aperture synthesis, bandwidth effects, and applications of radio interferometry including VLBI and intensity interferometry. Finally, it discusses opportunities for amateur radio astronomy using interferometry techniques.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views

Basics Basics Basics Basics of of of of Radio Interferometry

The document discusses the basics of radio interferometry. It begins by explaining the motivation for using radio interferometry due to the limited resolution of single radio telescopes. It then provides an overview of the key concepts of radio interferometry, including how multiple small telescopes can be combined to simulate a larger aperture telescope. The document discusses the two-element interferometer in detail and how the signals from two antennas can be combined. It also covers topics like aperture synthesis, bandwidth effects, and applications of radio interferometry including VLBI and intensity interferometry. Finally, it discusses opportunities for amateur radio astronomy using interferometry techniques.

Uploaded by

zainrahim
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 26

Basics

of
Radio Interferometry
by Armin Falb
member of Starkenburg-Sternwarte and ERAC

Second International Convention


Of the European Radio Astronomy Club
And the S.E.T.I. League USA
Heppenheim, September 9-10, 2000
What will we talk about?

+ Motivation for Radio Interferometry


+ Basic Ideas
+ The Two-Element Interferometer
(basic interferometer equations)
+ Aperture Synthesis
+ Amateur Radio Astronomy and Interferometry

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 2


[AF]
Motivation for Radio Interferometry

+ angular resolution of a telescope ∝ λ/D


+ optical telescopes: 20 marcsec
(D=5m, λ=500nm)
+ radio telescopes: 1 arcmin
(D=100m, λ=2.8cm)
+ extra-galactic radio sources:
fine scale structures < 1 marcsec
(1marcsec @ λ = 2.8cm ⇒ D = 6000km)

+ filled aperture telescopes limited to D ≈ 100m


September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 3
[AF]
The Solution

+ There is a way to build big radio telescopes:


! take several “small” telescopes in great
distance from one another
! combine their output signals in an
appropriate way
! do some computing on the results

That is a very simplistic view


of a radio interferometer

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 4


[AF]
Basic ideas I

+ fixed aperture antenna composed


from N elemental areas
+ each element n is contributing a signal
In cos(ωt+Φn)
+ vectorial addition of all signals yields:
N = 16
N N
P ∝ ½ ⋅ ∑∑ IjIkcos(Φj − Φk)
j=1 k =1
N N -1 N
= ½ ⋅ ∑ Ij² + ∑ ∑ I I cos(Φ − Φ )
j k j k
j=1 j=1 k = j+1

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 5


[AF]
Basic Ideas II

+ cross terms can be measured


separately one pair at a time
+ addition to be done later
+ two moveable antennas →
simulation of a large dish

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 6


[AF]
The Two-Element Interferometer I

B = Baseline
Θ = angle between
base line and wave
front from source
τg = B·sinΘ / c wave
propagation
(geometric) delay

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 7


[AF]
The Two-Element Interferometer II

+ assuming a point source and monochromatic radiation:


➀ R1(t) = E·cos ωt
➁ R2(t) = E·cos ω(t - τg)
➂ R3(t) = R1(t)·R2(t)
= [E·cos ωt] · [E·cos ω(t-τg)]
= ½E² · [cos ω(t + t - τg) + cos ω(t - t + τg)]
= ½E² · [cos ω(2t - τg) + cos ωτg]
➃ R4 = ½E² · cos ωτg

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 8


[AF]
The Two-Element Interferometer III

+ tracking the source / earth rotation make:


Θ = Θ(t) and τg = τg(t) = B·sin Θ(t) / c
+ therefore
B ⋅ sinΘ (t)
R4(t) = ½E²[cos(ω )]
c
  2πB ⋅ sinΘ (t)   2πB ⋅ Θ (t) 
= ½E² cos  ≈ ½E² ⋅ cos 
  λ   λ 

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 9


[AF]
The Two-Element Interferometer IV

←single antenna
characteristic

←tracking the source

←transit instrument

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 10


[AF]
Requirements for a Working
Interferometer

+ Technical requirements:
! local oscillators for mixers of both telescopes phase-locked
! RF lines from antennas to receivers of equal length

+ Radiation requirements
! planar wave fronts
! coherence length » τg·c
! variation of radiation intensity slow when compared to τg

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 11


[AF]
Extended Sources I

+ point source =
unrealistic case
+ extended source
= sum of point sources
+ response of the
interferometer
= sum of the responses
to point sources

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 12


[AF]
Extended Sources II

+ using vector notation:


! s(t) = source vector (to
source center)
! σ = element deviation
from source center
! B = vector notation of
baseline
! b = projected spacing

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 13


[AF]
Extended Sources III

+∞
R(t) ∝ ∫ dσ ⋅ I (σ ) ⋅ cos(2πB ⋅ (s(t) + σ ))
−∞

= V ⋅ exp{i 2πB ⋅ s(t )}


+∞
V= ∫ dσ ⋅ I (σ ) ⋅ exp{i 2πb ⋅ σ}
−∞

V = Visibility function = Fourier transformation of


source’s brightness distribution
September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 14
[AF]
Bandwidth Effects I

+ wide bandwidths desirable → increasing S/N ratio

 2πB ⋅ Θ (t)  from monochromatic


R(t) = ½E² ⋅ cos 
 λ  case becomes:
ω 0 + ∆ω
 2πB ⋅ Θ (t) 
R(t) = ½E² ⋅ ∫ω0
d(ω ) ⋅ α (ω ) ⋅ cos
 λ


α(ω) = frequency characteristics of equipment

∆ω τg can lead to loss of correlation !


+ big ∆ω:

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 15


[AF]
Bandwidth Effects II

+ instrumental delay
τi for compensation
+ exact compensation
of τg only for s
+ interferences from
source elements at
s+σσ

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 16


[AF]
Aperture Synthesis I

+ two-element interferometer
→ one Fourier component of brightness distribution
→ measuring at one discrete spatial frequency
+ spatial frequency
→ describes how fast the brightness changes with
the direction (angle) of observation
→ analogy: frequencies describe how fast the
amplitude of an electrical signal changes in time

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 17


[AF]
Aperture Synthesis II

+ single radio telescope = low-pass for spatial frequencies


+ interferometer = band-pass for spatial frequencies
+ reconstruction of brightness distribution needs
measuring at many different spatial frequencies
+ analogy: voice signal on a phone line
! one measuring system measures at 1kHz
! others at 300, 350, ... , 2800, 2900, 3000Hz
! all together → approximation of the original signal
! ordinary telephone ≅ filled aperture telescope
September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 18
[AF]
Aperture Synthesis III

Image reconstruction:
+ inverse Fourier transformation of a set of Visibility
functions
+ cleaning of images necessary
! CLEAN algorithm (Högbom 1974)
• variants: Clark, Cotton-Schwab
! Maximum Entropy Method (Wernecke 1975)

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 19


[AF]
Aperture Synthesis IV

+ image quality depends on number of elements

source’s
brightness 9x9 40 x 40
distribution components components

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 20


[AF]
VLBI

+ first interferometers: directly connected by RF lines


+ not feasible with greater distances
+ Very Long Baseline Interferometry:
! inter-continental distances (baselines > 10000km)
! synchronization of LOs: atomic frequency standards
! correlation of signals: off-line
! earth rotation → different visibility functions with the
same telescopes

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 21


[AF]
Intensity Interferometer

+ Hanbury Brown, Twiss (1968)


+ interferometer without phase stable system
(incoherent LOs)
+ post-detection multiplication
+ some correlation due to intensity fluctuatios
+ low signal-to-noise ratio

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 22


[AF]
Amateur Radio Astronomy and
Interferometry I

+ lots of amateur radio telescopes available


+ main problem: LO and time synchronization
+ ALLBIN project:
! synchronization of time by Astra satellite
! Phase 1: “only” accumulation of data
! Phase 2: intensity interferometer (no LO
synchronization necessary)
! Phase 3: ALLBIN a “normal” interferometer ???
September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 23
[AF]
Amateur Radio Astronomy and
Interferometry II

+ What’s missing to make ALLBIN a real interferometer?


(Assume data exchange and communication from
phase 1 working!)
! phase 2:
• understand Intensity Interferometer
• write software to combine data from telescopes
and for imaging
! phase 3:
• develop techniques to use satellite signal for LO
• software (use as much as possible from first step)
September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 24
[AF]
Literature I

+ Books
! John D. Kraus, Radio Astronomy, 2nd Edition, Cygnus-Quasar Books
! Burke, Graham-Smith, An Introduction to Radio Astronomy, Cambridge Univ. Press 1997
! Verschuur, Kellermann (Ed.), Galactic and Extra-Galactic Radio Astronomy, Chapter 10
by E.B.Fomalont & Melwyn C.H.Wright, Springer 1974
! Kristen Rohlfs, Tools of Radio Astronomy, Chapter 6, Springer 1986
! R.Wohlleben, H.Mattes, Interferometrie in Radioastronomie und Radartechnik, Vogel-
Verlag 1973
+ Articles
! E.B.Fomalont, Earth-Rotation Aperture Synthesis, IEEE Proceedings Vol.61, No.9, 1973
! A.R.Thompson, R.N.Bracewell, Interpolation and Fourier Transformation of Fringe
Visibilities, Astronomical Journal, 1974
! M.A.Cohen, High-Resolution Observations of Radio Sources, ARAA Vol. 7, 1969
! M.Ishiguro, Phase Error Correction in Multi-Element Radio Interferometers by Data
Processing, Astron.Astrophys.Supplement 15, 1974
September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 25
[AF]
Literature II

+ Articles (cont’d)
! S.I.Wernecke, Two-dimensional Maximum Entropy Reconstruction of Radio
Brightness, Radio Science, Vol. 12, No. 5, 1977
+ Internet
! http://www.treasure-troves.com/physics/IntensityInterferometer.html
! http://www.treasure-troves.com/physics/SynthesisImaging.html
! http://www.treasure-troves.com/physics/Visibility.html
! MERLIN User’s Guide:
http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/merlin/user_guide//preface.html
! image cleaning algorithms:
http://www.cv.nrao.edu/~abridle/deconvol/node7.html
! Astronomical Optical Interferometry, A Literature Review by Bob Tubbs:
http://www.cus.cam.ac.uk/~mt20/interferometry/ast_opt_int/page1.html

September 8, 2000 Basics of Radio Interferometry 26


[AF]

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