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SARAS 3 CD/EoR Radiometer: Design and Performance of the Receiver

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 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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SARAS is an ongoing experiment aiming to detect the redshifted global 21-cm signal expected from Cosmic Dawn (CD) and the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). Standard cosmological models predict the signal to be present in the redshift range $z sim $6--35, corresponding to a frequency range 40--200~MHz, as a spectral distortion of amplitude 20--200~mK in the 3~K cosmic microwave background. Since the signal might span multiple octaves in frequency, and this frequency range is dominated by strong terrestrial Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) and astrophysical foregrounds of Galactic and Extragalactic origin that are several orders of magnitude greater in brightness temperature, design of a radiometer for measurement of this faint signal is a challenging task. It is critical that the instrumental systematics do not result in additive or multiplicative confusing spectral structures in the measured sky spectrum and thus preclude detection of the weak 21-cm signal. Here we present the system design of the SARAS~3 version of the receiver. New features in the evolved design include Dicke switching, double differencing and optical isolation for improved accuracy in calibration and rejection of additive and multiplicative systematics. We derive and present the measurement equations for the SARAS~3 receiver configuration and calibration scheme, and provide results of laboratory tests performed using various precision terminations that qualify the performance of the radiometer receiver for the science goal.

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In the currently accepted model for cosmic baryon evolution, Cosmic Dawn and the Epoch of Reionization are significant times when first light from the first luminous objects emerged, transformed and subsequently ionized the primordial gas. The 21 cm hyperfine transition of neutral hydrogen, redshifted from these cosmic times to a frequency range of 40 to 200 MHz, has been recognized as an important probe of the physics of CD/EoR. The global 21-cm signal is predicted to be a spectral distortion of a few 10s to a few 100s of mK, which is expected to be present in the cosmic radio background as a trace additive component. SARAS, Shaped Antenna measurement of the background RAdio Spectrum, is a spectral radiometer purpose designed to detect the weak 21-cm signal from CD/EoR. An important subsystem of the radiometer, the digital correlation spectrometer, is developed around a high speed digital signal processing platform called pSPEC. pSPEC is built around two quad 10 bit analog-to-digital converters and a Virtex 6 field programmable gate array, with provision for multiple Gigabit Ethernet and 4.5 Gbps fibre optic interfaces. Here we describe the system design of the digital spectrometer, the pSPEC board, and the adaptation of pSPEC to implement a high spectral resolution of about 61 kHz, high dynamic range correlation spectrometer covering the entire CD/EoR band. As the SARAS radiometer is required to be deployed in remote locations where terrestrial radio frequency interference is a minimum, the spectrometer is designed to be compact, portable and operating off internal batteries. The paper includes an evaluation of the spectrometers susceptibility to radio frequency interference and capability to detect signals from CD/EoR.
Branches of cosmic inflationary models, such as slow-roll inflation, predict a background of primordial gravitational waves that imprints a unique odd-parity B-mode pattern in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) at amplitudes that are within experimental reach. The BICEP/Keck (BK) experiment targets this primordial signature, the amplitude of which is parameterized by the tensor-to-scalar ratio r, by observing the polarized microwave sky through the exceptionally clean and stable atmosphere at the South Pole. B-mode measurements require an instrument with exquisite sensitivity, tight control of systematics, and wide frequency coverage to disentangle the primordial signal from the Galactic foregrounds. BICEP Array represents the most recent stage of the BK program, and comprises four BICEP3-class receivers observing at 30/40, 95, 150 and 220/270 GHz. The 30/40 GHz receiver will be deployed at the South Pole during the 2019/2020 austral summer. After 3 full years of observations with 30,000+ detectors, BICEP Array will measure primordial gravitational waves to a precision $sigma(r)$ between 0.002 and 0.004, depending on foreground complexity and the degree of lensing removal. In this paper we give an overview of the instrument, highlighting the design features in terms of cryogenics, magnetic shielding, detectors and readout architecture as well as reporting on the integration and tests that are ongoing with the first receiver at 30/40 GHz.
The SPT-3G receiver was commissioned in early 2017 on the 10-meter South Pole Telescope (SPT) to map anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). New optics, detector, and readout technologies have yielded a multichroic, high-resolution, low-noise camera with impressive throughput and sensitivity, offering the potential to improve our understanding of inflationary physics, astroparticle physics, and growth of structure. We highlight several key features and design principles of the new receiver, and summarize its performance to date.
The global 21 cm signal from Cosmic Dawn (CD) and the Epoch of Reionization (EoR), at redshifts $z sim 6-30$, probes the nature of first sources of radiation as well as physics of the Inter-Galactic Medium (IGM). Given that the signal is predicted to be extremely weak, of wide fractional bandwidth, and lies in a frequency range that is dominated by Galactic and Extragalactic foregrounds as well as Radio Frequency Interference, detection of the signal is a daunting task. Critical to the experiment is the manner in which the sky signal is represented through the instrument. It is of utmost importance to design a system whose spectral bandpass and additive spurious can be well calibrated and any calibration residual does not mimic the signal. SARAS is an ongoing experiment that aims to detect the global 21 cm signal. Here we present the design philosophy of the SARAS 2 system and discuss its performance and limitations based on laboratory and field measurements. Laboratory tests with the antenna replaced with a variety of terminations, including a network model for the antenna impedance, show that the gain calibration and modeling of internal additives leave no residuals with Fourier amplitudes exceeding 2~mK, or residual Gaussians of 25 MHz width with amplitudes exceeding 2~mK. Thus, even accounting for reflection and radiation efficiency losses in the antenna, the SARAS~2 system is capable of detection of complex 21-cm profiles at the level predicted by currently favoured models for thermal baryon evolution.
The Axion Dark Matter eXperiment (ADMX) was designed to detect ultra-weakly interacting relic axion particles by searching for their conversion to microwave photons in a resonant cavity positioned in a strong magnetic field. Given the extremely low expected axion-photon conversion power we have designed, built and operated a microwave receiver based on a Superconducting QUantum Interference Device (SQUID). We describe the ADMX receiver in detail as well as the analysis of narrow band microwave signals. We demonstrate the sustained use of a SQUID amplifier operating between 812 and 860 MHz with a noise temperature of 1 K. The receiver has a noise equivalent power of 1.1x10^-24 W/sqrt(Hz) in the band of operation for an integration time of 1.8x10^3 s.
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