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National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept. 2005 – Indiana University How do Radio Telescopes work? K. Y. Lo Electromagnetic Radiation Wavelength Radio Detection techniques developed from meter-wave to submillimeter-wave: = 1 meter = 300 MHz = 1 mm = 300 GHz National Radio Astronomy Observatory September 2005 – Indiana Universe General Antenna Types Wavelength > 1 m (approx) Wire Antennas Dipole Yagi Helix or arrays of these Wavelength < 1 m (approx) Reflector antennas Feed Wavelength = 1 m (approx) Hybrid antennas (wire reflectors or feeds) REFLECTOR TYPES Prime focus (GMRT) Offset Cassegrain (VLA) Beam Waveguide (NRO) National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Cassegrain focus (AT) Naysmith (OVRO) Dual Offset (ATA) REFLECTOR TYPES Prime focus (GMRT) Offset Cassegrain (VLA) Beam Waveguide (NRO) National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Cassegrain focus (AT) Naysmith (OVRO) Dual Offset (ATA) What do Radio Astronomers measure? • Luminosity of a source: L = dE/dt erg/s • Flux of a source at distance R: S = L/4R2 erg/s/cm2 • Flux measures how bright a star is. In optical astronomy, this is measured in magnitudes, a logarithmic measure of flux. • Intensity: If a source is extended, its surface brightness varies across its extent. The surface brightness is the intensity, the amount of flux that originates from unit solid angle of the source: National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University I = dS/d erg/s/cm2/steradian Measures of Radiation • The following should be clear: L = S d = 4R2 S for isotropic source 4 S = I d source • Since astronomical sources emit a wide spectrum of radiation, L, S and I are all functions of or , and we need to be more precise and define: • Luminosity density: L() = dL/d W/Hz • Flux density: S() = dS/d W/m2/Hz • Specific intensity: I() = dI/d W/m2/str/Hz • The specific intensity is the fundamental quantity characterizing radiation. It is a function of frequency, direction, s, and time. • In general, the energy crossing a unit area oriented at an angle to s, specified by the vector da, is given by dE = I(, s, t) sda d d dt = I(, ) sda d d dt Analogs in optical astronomy • Luminosity is given by absolute magnitude • Flux, or brightness, is given by magnitudes within defined bands: U, B, V • Intensity, or surface brightness, is given by magnitude per square arc-second • Optical measures are logarithmic because the eye is roughly logarithmic in its perception of brightness • Quantitatively, a picture is really an intensity distribution map National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Rayleigh-Jeans Law and Brightness Temperature • The Specific Intensity of thermal radiation from a blackbody at temperature T is given by the Planck Distribution I = (2h3/c2)/[exp(h/kT) 1] = (2hc3/2)/[exp(hc/kT) 1] = 2kT/2 if >> hc/kT or h << kT, R-J Law • Brightness Temperature Tb (2/2k) I = T for thermal radiation • Brightness temperature of the Earth at 100 MHz ~ 108 K (due to TV stations) National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Antenna = Radio Telescope • The function of the antenna is to collect radio waves, and each antenna presents a cross section, or Effective Area, Ae(, ), which depends on direction (, ) • The power collected per unit frequency by the antenna from within a solid angle d about the direction (, ) is given by dP = ½ I (, ) Ae (, ) d W/Hz The ½ is because the typical radio receiver detects only one polarization of the radiation which we assume to be unpolarized. National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University • The power density collected by the antenna from all directions is P = ½ I (, ) Ae (, ) d W/Hz • Antenna Temperature TA is defined by TA = P/k in K (Nyquist Theorem) • Therefore TA = (1/2k) I (, ) Ae (, ) d K • For a point source, I = S (, ) kTA = ½ Ae,max S W/Hz if Ae (, ) has a maximum value Ae,max at (, ) = (0, 0) • (Maximum) Effective Area of an antenna: Ae,max = ap Ag m2 where Ag is the geometric area and ap is the aperture efficiency. But, for a dipole antenna, Ag is zero but Ae is not. National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University • Antenna pattern: Pn(,) = Ae(,)/Ae,max Pn(0,0) = 1 if the pattern is maximum in the forward direction • If the antenna is pointed at direction (o,o) TA (o,o) = (1/2k) I (, ) Ae (o, o) d In terms of Tb and Pn , TA (o,o) = (Ae,max/2) Tb (, ) Pn (o, o) d = (1/A) Tb (, ) Pn (o, o) d where 2/Ae,max= A. Note the antenna temperature, which measures the power density P (W/Hz) collected by the antenna is the convolution of the antenna pattern Pn with the source brightness distribution Tb National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Antenna Properties Effective area: Ae(,,) m2 On-axis response Ae,max = Ag = aperture efficiency Normalized power pattern (primary beam) Pn(,,) = Ae(,,)/Ae,max Beam solid angle A= Pn(,,) d 4, = frequency all sky = wavelength Mapping by an Antenna TA (o,o) = (Ae,max/2) Tb (, ) Pn (o, o) d • Point source: Tb(, ) = (2/2k)S (, ) TA (o,o) = (Ae,max/2) (2/2k)S (, ) Pn (o, o) d = (Ae,max/2k) S Pn (o, o) Antenna pattern can be determined by scanning a point source If pointing at the point source, then kTA = ½ Ae,maxS If S is known, then Ae,max can be determined by measuring TA • Unresolved source: s < m ~ A 2/Ae,max TA (0, 0) = (Ae,max/2) Tb (, ) Pn (, ) d = (s/ A) Tb = (m/ A) (s/ m) Tb TA = m(s/ m) Tb Beam dilution National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Milky Way Maxwell Equations? • Radio telescopes operate in the physical optics regime, ~ D, instead of the geometric optics regime, << D, of optical telescope diffraction of radiation important • Easier to think of a radio telescope in terms of transmitting radiation • A point source of radiation (transmitter) at the focus of a paraboloid is designed to illuminate the aperture with a uniform electric field • The diffraction of the electric field across the aperture according to Huygens’ Principle determines the propagation of the electric field outward from the aperture or primary telescope surface • The transmitted electric field at a distant (far-field) point P in the direction (,) is given by the Fourier Transform of the electric field distribution across the aperture u(, ): u(,) u(, ) exp[2( + )/] dd National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Antenna Pattern: Directional Response • Field Pattern of an antenna is defined by the Fourier Transform of the illumination of the aperture: u(,) u(, ) • Antenna Pattern is defined in terms of power or the square of the E field,|u|2. Pn(,) = |u(,)|2/|u(0,0)|2 • Alternately, the antenna pattern is proportional to the Fourier Transform of the auto-correlation function of the aperture illumination, u(, ) National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Aperture-Beam Fourier Transform Relationship u (, ) = aperture illumination |u ()|2 = Electric field distribution across the aperture (, ) = aperture coordinates ; u(,) = far-field electric field ( , ) = direction relative to |u ()|2 “optical axis” of telescope : : Antenna Key Features National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Types of Antenna Mount + Beam does not rotate + Lower cost + Better tracking accuracy - Higher cost + Better gravity performance - Beam rotates on the sky - Poorer gravity performance - Non-intersecting axis Antenna pointing design Subreflector mount Reflector structure Quadrupod El encoder Alidade structure Rail flatness Foundation Az encoder National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University What happens to the signal collected by the antenna? Heterodyne Detection • At the focus, the radiation is collected by the receiver through a “feed” into a receiver that “pre-amplifies” the signal. • Then, the signal is mixed with a local oscillator signal close in frequency to the observing frequency in a nonlinear device (mixer). • The beat signal (IF or intermediate frequency signal) is usually amplified again before going through a bandwidth defining filter. (Frequency translation) •Then the IF signal is detected by a square-law detector. RF at fsky Pre-amplifier LO at fLO IF at fsky fLO Amplification and filtering Voltage |E|2 VLA and EVLA Feed System Design VLA EVLA Wideband LBand OMT and Feed Horn National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University Receivers in the telescope PF 1-1: PF 1-2: PF 1-3: PF 1-4: PF 2 : Gregorian Receiver Room L S C X Ku K1 K2 Q 0.29 - 0.40 GHz 0.38 - 0.52 0.51 - 0.69 0.68 - 0.92 0.91 - 1.23 : 1.15 - 1.73 GHz : 1.73 - 2.60 : 3.95 - 5.85 : 8.00 - 10.0 : 12.0 - 15.4 : 18.0 - 22.0 : 22.0 - 26.5 : 40.0 - 52.0 Radiometer Equation • For an unresolved source, the detection sensitivity of a radio telescope is determined by the effective area of the telescope and the “noisiness” of the receiver • For an unresolved source of a given flux, S, the expected antenna temperature is given by kTA = ½ Ae,maxS • The minimum detectable TA is given by TA = Ts/(B) where Ts is the system temperature of the receiver, B is the bandwidth and is the integration time, and is of order unity depending on the details of the system. The system temperature measures the noise power of the receiver (Ps = BkTs). In Radio Astronomy, detection is typically receiver noise dominated. National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University High Resolution: Interferometry • Resolution /D – 5 cm/100m = 2 arc-minute • Uses smaller telescopes to make much larger 'virtual' telescope • Maximum distance between antennas determines resolution • VLA = 22-mile diameter radio telescope – 5 cm/22 miles = 0.3 arc-second • Aperture Synthesis: Nobel Prize 1974 (Ryle) National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University D VLA = Very Large Array (1980) Plain of San Augustine, New Mexico National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University 27-antenna array: Extremely versatile Most productive telescope on ground Interacting Galaxies • Optical image (left) shows nothing of the Hydrogen gas revealed by radio image by VLA (right). Very Long Baseline Array • 10 25m antennas • Continent-wide: 5400-mile diameter radio telescope • 6 cm/5400 miles = 0.001 arc-second • Highest resolution imaging telescope in astronomy: 1 milli-arc-second = reading a news-paper at a distance of 2000 km National Radio Astronomy Observatory Sept 2005: Indiana University