1 / 24

Antennas in Radio Astronomy

Antennas in Radio Astronomy. Peter Napier. Outline. Interferometer block diagram Antenna fundamentals Types of antennas Antenna performance parameters Receivers. Interferometer Block Diagram. Antenna Front End IF Back End Correlator. E.g., VLA observing at 4.8 GHz (C band).

ismail
Download Presentation

Antennas in Radio Astronomy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Antennas in Radio Astronomy Peter Napier

  2. Outline • Interferometer block diagram • Antenna fundamentals • Types of antennas • Antenna performance parameters • Receivers P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  3. P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  4. Interferometer Block Diagram Antenna Front End IF Back End Correlator E.g., VLA observing at 4.8 GHz (C band) P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  5. Importance of the Antenna Elements • Antenna amplitude pattern causes amplitude to vary across the source. • Antenna phase pattern causes phase to vary across the source. • Polarization properties of the antenna modify the apparent polarization of the source. • Antenna pointing errors can cause time varying amplitude and phase errors. • Variation in noise pickup from the ground can cause time variable amplitude errors. • Deformations of the antenna surface can cause amplitude and phase errors, especially at short wavelengths. P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  6. General Antenna Types Wavelength > 1 m (approx) Wire Antennas Dipole Yagi Helix or arrays of these Wavelength < 1 m (approx) Reflector antennas Wavelength = 1 m (approx) Hybrid antennas (wire reflectors or feeds) Feed P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  7. Basic Antenna Formulas Effective collecting area A(n,q,f) m2 On-axis response A0 = hA h=aperture efficiency Normalized pattern (primary beam) A(n,q,f) = A(n,q,f)/A0 Beam solid angle WA= ∫∫ A(n,q,f) dWn = frequency all sky l= wavelength A0 WA = l2 P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  8. Aperture-Beam Fourier Transform Relationship f(u,v) = complex aperture field distribution u,v = aperture coordinates (wavelengths) F(l,m) = complex far-field voltage pattern l = sinqcosf , m = sinqsinf F(l,m) = ∫∫aperturef(u,v)exp(2pi(ul+vm)dudv f(u,v) = ∫∫hemisphereF(l,m)exp(-2pi(ul+vm)dldm For VLA: q3dB = 1.02/D, First null = 1.22/D, D = reflector diameter in wavelengths P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  9. Primary Antenna Key Features P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  10. Types of Antenna Mount + Beam does not rotate + Lower cost + Better tracking accuracy + Better gravity performance - Higher cost - Beam rotates on the sky - Poorer gravity performance - Non-intersecting axis P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  11. Beam Rotation on the Sky Parallactic angle P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  12. Reflector Types Prime focus Cassegrain focus (GMRT) (AT) Offset Cassegrain Naysmith (VLA) (OVRO) Beam Waveguide Dual Offset (NRO) (ATA) P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  13. Reflector Types Prime focus Cassegrain focus (GMRT) (AT) Offset Cassegrain Naysmith (VLA) (OVRO) Beam Waveguide Dual Offset (NRO) (ATA) P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  14. VLA and EVLA Feed System Design P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  15. Antenna Performance Parameters Aperture Efficiency A0 = hA, h=hsf´hbl´hs´ht´hmisc hsf = reflector surface efficiency hbl = blockage efficiency hs = feed spillover efficiency ht = feed illumination efficiency hmisc= diffraction, phase, match, loss hsf = exp(-(4ps/l)2) e.g., s = l/16 , hsf = 0.5 rms error s P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  16. Antenna Performance Parameters Primary Beam l=sin(q), D = antenna diameter in contours:-3,-6,-10,-15,-20,-25, wavelengths -30,-35,-40 dB dB = 10log(power ratio) = 20log(voltage ratio) For VLA: q3dB = 1.02/D, First null = 1.22/D pDl P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  17. Antenna Performance Parameters Dq Pointing Accuracy Dq=rms pointing error Often Dq<q3dB/10 acceptable Because A(q3dB /10) ~ 0.97 BUT, at half power point in beam A(q3dB/2 ±q3dB/10)/A(q3dB/2) = ±0.3 For best VLA pointing use Reference Pointing. Dq=3 arcsec = q3dB/17 @ 50 GHz q3dB Primary beam A(q) P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  18. Antenna Pointing Design Subreflector mount Reflector structure Quadrupod El encoder Alidade structure Rail flatness Foundation Az encoder P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  19. ALMA 12m Antenna Design Surface: s = 25 mm Pointing: Dq = 0.6 arcsec Carbon fiber and invar reflector structure Pointing metrology structure inside alidade P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  20. Antenna Performance Parameters Polarization Antenna can modify the apparent polarization properties of the source: • Symmetry of the optics • Quality of feed polarization splitter • Circularity of feed radiation patterns • Reflections in the optics • Curvature of the reflectors P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  21. Off-Axis Cross Polarization Cross polarized Cross polarized aperture distribution primary beam VLA 4.8 GHz cross polarized primary beam P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  22. Antenna Holography VLA 4.8 GHz Far field pattern amplitude Phase not shown Aperture field distribution amplitude. Phase not shown P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  23. Receivers Receiver Matched load Temp T (oK) Gain GB/W Pout=G*Pin Pin Noise Temperature Pin = kBT  (W), kB = Boltzman’s constant (1.38*10-23 J/oK) When observing a radio source Ttotal = TA + Tsys Tsys = system noise when not looking at a discrete radio source TA = source antenna temperature TA = AS/(2kB) = KS S = source flux (Jy) SEFD = system equivalent flux density SEFD = Tsys/K (Jy) Rayleigh-Jeans approximation EVLA Sensitivities P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

  24. Corrections to Chapter 3 of Synthesis Imaging in Radio Astronomy II Equation 3-8: replace u,v with l,m Figure 3-7: abscissa title should be pDl P. Napier, Ninth Synthesis Imaging Summer School, June 15-22 2004

More Related