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COSMIC : Microarcsecond resolution with a 30 metre radio telescope

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 Added by Simon Ellingsen
 Publication date 2004
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Interstellar scintillation has been conclusively demonstrated to be the principal cause of the intraday variability (IDV) observed in the centimetre-wavelength emission of many AGN. A few sources show large amplitude modulation in their flux density on a timescale of hours. However, the majority of IDV sources exhibit variability on timescales of a day or more. On timescales of a year some sources have been found to show an annual cycle in the pattern of their variability. Such an annual cycle occurs because the relative speeds of the Earth and the interstellar medium change as the Earth orbits the Sun. To search for these annual variations as well as to follow the source evolution, requires a dedicated instrument; the necessary amounts of observing time are beyond the capability of the national facility instruments. Here we describe the scientific motivation for, and present an outline of the COSMIC (Continuous Single dish Monitoring of Intraday variability at Ceduna) project which uses the University of Tasmanias 30 m diameter radio telescope at Ceduna, which has been monitoring the flux density of a number of the stronger southern scintillators at 6.65 GHz since March 2003.



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