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New VLBA capabilities with DiFX. Wide-field imaging, multi-field imaging and more. Adam Deller. NRAO / UC Berkeley. Outline. The DiFX software correlator and its usage with the VLBA New capabilities offered by DiFX compared to the VLBA hardware correlator: Broad compatibility
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New VLBA capabilities with DiFX Wide-field imaging, multi-field imaging and more • Adam Deller • NRAO / UC Berkeley
Outline • The DiFX software correlator and its usage with the VLBA • New capabilities offered by DiFX compared to the VLBA hardware correlator: • Broad compatibility • Spectral/temporal resolution • Pulsar analysis • Commensal science • Wide-field / multi-field capabilities
The DiFX software correlator • A C++ program running on commodity computer hardware (rack-mounted, multi-core servers) • Development commenced in 2005, adopted by Australian Long Baseline Array in 2006, NRAO testing from 2008 and complete switch by December 2009 • Supported by numerous libraries and applications for job configuration, FITS file building etc; ~10 active developers (NRAO, MPIfR, ATNF/Curtin, Haystack)
The DiFX software correlator • Performance is good; hardware capable of supporting 10 stations x 512 Mbps would cost ~$12,000 in 2011 • Low barriers to getting started has encouraged many adopters • Many contributors to code • This combined with ease of coding in C++ c.f. FPGAs has contributed to the rapid development of new features like the ones focused on today
Unique DiFX capabilities • Compatibility, expandability • Initial reason for adoption - needed something capable of expansion to 4 Gbps system • incremental nature is extremely useful (hardware purchased in 4 stages, minimizing overall cost through Moore’s Law) • Handles all input/output VLBI formats • Flexibility in parameter setting • Time, frequency resolution in particular
Unique DiFX capabilities • Much more flexible pulsar processing (dynamic allocation of resources); allows pulse-phase dependant studies (binning) and “matched filtering” forrecovery ofoptimal S/N fromcomplexprofiles
Unique DiFX capabilities • Ease of adding new features has allowed low-overhead commensal functionality • One such feature produces ms time resolution spectrometer and spectral kurtosis data • The V-FASTR project has been approved to search for fast transient events during all DiFX correlations of VLBA data • Real-time pipeline captures, re-orders and flags data and searches for dispersed pulses
Unique DiFX capabilities raw filterbank data bandpass, tcal corrected data frequency time
Unique DiFX capabilities • V-FASTR has detected both normal and giant pulses from multiple (targeted) pulsars • Running near full-time now • Exploring an unknown area of parameter using a new technique at near-zero cost • Highly visible pathfinder for SKA transient searches • Also produces valuable RFI information for routine VLBA operations
Wide-field imaging • DiFX is the most capable VLBI correlator in the world for wide-field imaging, due to the attainable time and frequency resolution primary beam: 30’ primary beam: 30’ Time resolution:200 ms Freq. resolution:50 kHz 12hr VLBA dataset:240 GB Time resolution:2000 ms Freq. resolution:500 kHz 12hr VLBA dataset:2.4 GB phase centre phase centre Smearing-limitedfield of view2’ Smearing-limitedfield of view15” Calculations for 1.6 GHz, total smearing = 10%
Wide-field imaging • This ability has been widely used since the introduction of DiFX • However, full-beam VLBA imaging is still a logistical impracticality primary beam: 30’ Time resolution:20 ms Freq. resolution:4 kHz 12hr VLBA dataset:30,000 GB phase centre Smearing-limitedfield of view30’ Calculations for 1.6 GHz, total smearing = 10%
Wide-field imaging • Generally, however, the sky is almost entirely empty at VLBI resolution • Thus, usually do not want “full beam” imaging; rather, many targeted small “fields” • This can be achieved by uv shifting after correlation, but spectral/temporal resolution requirements are identical to imaging • DiFX has moved the uv shift inside the correlator, allowing “multi-field” correlation and avoiding the logistical problem
Multi-field imaging primary beam primary beam primary beam primary beam phase centre phase centre Smearing-limitedfield of view phase shift phase centre Smearing-limitedfield of view Smearing-limitedfield of view Correlateat highresolutionfor ~10ms Apply uv shift Averagein frequency Repeat for many phase centres THEN: Repeat for next ~10ms (average in time)
Multi-field imaging Satisfactory “finder” catalogs already exist for most applications of this technique primarybeam Image:Randomcutout, NRAO FIRSTsurvey VLBI fields still not to scale!
Multi-field imaging • Some computational overhead (factor of ~2.5) due to higher upfront spectral resolution, but additional fields are almost free (factor of <1.01) • Thus efficiency gain increases as number of targets per pointing increases • VLBA is unparalleled for multi-field VLBI applications due to homogeneous, relatively small dishes (large antennas or phased arrays reduce useful field of view)
Multi-field imaging • For mJy-sensitivity secondary calibrator searches (me, later) with ~20 targets/pointing, net factor of 7 increase • For sub-mJy sensitivity deep field AGN searches (e.g. Middelberg) with ~300 targets/pointing, net factor of ~100!
Multi-field imaging • Efficient VLBI surveys of mJy and sub-mJy objects are feasible for the first time • Middelberg et al. (2011) already published VLBA results on Chandra Deep Field South, more on the way covering variety of area and sensitivity ranges From Middelberg et al., 2011
Conclusions • In addition to facilitating the ongoing sensitivity upgrade, DiFX has opened a number of new areas of parameter space for the VLBA • Advanced pulsar processing • Commensal transient observations • Wide-field and multi-field observations • Of these, multi-field observations have the potential for opening up the most new applications - VLBI surveying is now practical