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In this study, a novel type of Fourier transform radio spectrometer (termed as all-digital radio spectrometer; ADRS) has been developed in which all functionalities comprising a radio spectrometer including a sampler and Fourier computing unit were implemented as a soft-core on a field-programmable gate array (FPGA). A delay-line-based ramp-compare analog-to-digital converter (ADC), one of completely digital ADC, was used, and two primary elements of the ADC, an analog-to-time converter (ATC) and a time-to-digital converter (TDC), were implemented on the FPGA. The sampling rate of the ADRS $f$ and the quantization bit rate $n$ are limited by the relation, $tau = frac{1}{2^{n}f}$, where $tau$ is the latency of the delay element of the delay-line. Given that the typical latency of the delay element implemented on FPGAs is $sim10$ ps, adoption of a low quantization bit rate, which satisfies the requirements for radio astronomy, facilitates the realization of a high sampling rate up to $sim$100 GSa/s. In addition, as the proposed ADRS does not require a discrete ADC and can be implemented on mass-produced evaluation boards, its fabrication cost is much lower than that of conventional spectrometers. The ADRS prototype was fabricated with values of $f$ = 600 MSa/s and $n$ = 6.6 using a PYNQ-Z1 evaluation board, with a $tau$ of 16.7 ps. The performance of the prototype, including its linearity and stability, was measured, and a test observation was conducted using the Osaka Prefecture University 1.85-m mm-submm telescope; this confirmed the potential application of the prototype in authentic radio observations. With 10 times better cost performance ($sim$800 USD GHz$^{-1}$) than conventional radio spectrometers, the prototype facilitates cost-effective coverage of intermediate frequency (IF) bandwidths of $sim100$ GHz in modern receiver systems.
We have developed a digital fast Fourier transform (FFT) spectrometer made of an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) and a field-programmable gate array (FPGA). The base instrument has independent ADC and FPGA modules, which allow us to implement diffe
We have constructed a Fourier-transform spectrometer (FTS) operating between 50 and 330 GHz with minimum volume (355 x260 x64 mm) and weight (13 lbs) while maximizing optical throughput (100 $mathrm{mm}^2$ sr) and optimizing the spectral resolution (
Kinetic inductance in thin film superconductors has been used as the basis for low-temperature, low-noise photon detectors. In particular thin films such as NbTiN, TiN, NbN, the kinetic inductance effect is strongly non-linear in the applied current,
We present an overview of the ICE hardware and software framework that implements large arrays of interconnected FPGA-based data acquisition, signal processing and networking nodes economically. The system was conceived for application to radio, mill
We present new data obtained with SpIOMM, the imaging Fourier transform spectrometer attached to the 1.6-m telescope of the Observatoire du Mont-Megantic in Quebec. Recent technical and data reduction improvements have significantly increased SpIOMMs