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Measured Aperture-Array Noise Temperature of the Mark II Phased Array Feed for ASKAP

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 Added by Aaron Chippendale
 Publication date 2015
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We have measured the aperture-array noise temperature of the first Mk. II phased array feed that CSIRO has built for the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder telescope. As an aperture array, the Mk. II phased array feed achieves a beam equivalent noise temperature less than 40 K from 0.78 GHz to 1.7 GHz and less than 50 K from 0.7 GHz to 1.8 GHz for a boresight beam directed at the zenith. We believe these are the lowest reported noise temperatures over these frequency ranges for ambient-temperature phased arrays. The measured noise temperature includes receiver electronics noise, ohmic losses in the array, and stray radiation from sidelobes illuminating the sky and ground away from the desired field of view. This phased array feed was designed for the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder to demonstrate fast astronomical surveys with a wide field of view for the Square Kilometre Array.



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This paper presents the measured sensitivity of CSIROs first Mk. II phased array feed (PAF) on an ASKAP antenna. The Mk. II achieves a minimum system-temperature-over-efficiency $T_mathrm{sys}/eta$ of 78 K at 1.23 GHz and is 95 K or better from 835 MHz to 1.8 GHz. This PAF was designed for the Australian SKA Pathfinder telescope to demonstrate fast astronomical surveys with a wide field of view for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA).
In this report we present a model for phased array feed (PAF) and compare the model predictions with measurements. A theory for loss-less PAF is presented first. To develop the theory we ask the question -- what is the best $T_{sys}/eta_{ap}$ that can be achieved when a PAF is used on a telescope to observe a source at an angle $theta_s, phi_s$ from the boresight direction ? We show that a characteristic matrix for the {em system} (i.e. PAF+telescope+receiver) can be constructed starting from the signal-to-noise ratio of the observations and the best $T_{sys}/eta_{ap}$ can be obtained from the maximum eigenvalue of the characteristic matrix. For constructing the characteristic matrix, we derive the open-circuit voltage at the output of the antenna elements in the PAF due to (a) radiation from source, (b) radiation from ground (spillover), (c) radiation from sky background and (d) noise due to the receiver. The characteristic matrix is then obtained from the correlation matrices of these voltages. We then describe a modeling program developed to implement the theory presented here. Finally the model predictions are compared with results from test observations made toward Virgo A with a prototype PAF (Kite array) on the GBT (Roshi et al. 2015).
During February 2016, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science and the Max-Planck-Institute for Radio Astronomy installed, commissioned and carried out science observations with a phased array feed (PAF) receiver system on the 64m diameter Parkes radio telescope. Here we demonstrate that the PAF can be used for pulsar observations and we highlight some unique capabilities. We demonstrate that the pulse profiles obtained using the PAF can be calibrated and that multiple pulsars can be simultaneously observed. Significantly, we find that an intrinsic polarisation leakage of -31dB can be achieved with a PAF beam offset from the centre of the field of view. We discuss the possibilities for using a PAF for future pulsar observations and for searching for fast radio bursts with the Parkes and Effelsberg telescopes.
We present first results from pilot observations using a phased array feed (PAF) mounted on the Parkes 64-m radio telescope. The observations presented here cover a frequency range from 1150 to 1480 MHz and are used to show the ability of PAFs to suppress standing wave problems by a factor of $sim10$ which afflict normal feeds. We also compare our results with previous HIPASS observations and with previous HI images of the Large Magellanic Cloud. Drift scan observations of the GAMA G23 field resulted in direct HI detections at $z=0.0043$ and $z=0.0055$ of HIPASS galaxies J2242-30 and J2309-30. Our new measurements generally agree with archival data in spectral shape and flux density, with small differences being due to differing beam patterns. We also detect signal in the stacked HI data of 1094 individually undetected galaxies in the GAMA G23 field in the redshift range $0.05 leq z leq 0.075$. Finally, we use the low standing wave ripple and wide bandwidth of the PAF to set a $3sigma$ upper limit to any positronium recombination line emission from the Galactic Centre of $<0.09$ K, corresponding to a recombination rate of $<3.0times10^{45},mathrm{s}^{-1}$.
The purpose of this report is to document the noise performance of a complex beamforming array antenna system and to characterize the recently developed noise measurement facility called THACO, which was developed at ASTRON. The receiver system includes the array antenna of strongly coupled 144 TSA elements, 144 Low Noise Amplifiers (LNAs) (Tmin =35-40K) and the data recording/storing facilities of the initial test station that allow for off-line digital beamforming. The primary goal of this study is to compare the measured receiver noise temperatures with the simulated values for several practical beamformers, and to predict the associated receiver noise coupling contribution, antenna thermal noise and ground noise pick-up (due to the back radiation).
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