280 likes | 313 Vues
Radio Telescopes and Radiometers. 2015 Single Dish School. Jim Condon. NRAO, Charlottesville. Radio Telescopes and Antennas.
E N D
Radio Telescopes and Radiometers 2015 Single Dish School Jim Condon NRAO, Charlottesville
Radio Telescopes and Antennas • An antenna is any device that converts electromagnetic radiation traveling through space to electrical currents flowing in a wire (receiving antenna) or vice-versa (transmitting antenna). • Radio telescopes, and only radio telescopes, contain antennas. • Most of a typical radio telescope is not an antenna − the big dish just redirects electromagnetic radiation to the antenna part. Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Electromagnetic radiation is produced by accelerating charged particles Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Dipole antenna Power pattern Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Reciprocity theorem The receiving and transmitting patterns of an antenna are identical. Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Ground-plane Waveguide horn vertical = ½ of a half-wave dipole Single Dish School 2015 July 6
The waveguide horn used to discover λ = 21 cm HI emission from our Galaxy Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Parabolic reflector:directivity and collecting area Prime focus Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Aperture Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Illumination, field, and power patterns Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Cassegrain subreflector Single Dish School 2015 July 6
140-foot (43 m)Cassegrain Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Reflector surface errors Single Dish School 2015 July 6
100 m homology telescope in Effelsberg Single Dish School 2015 July 6
GBT: homology plus active surface Single Dish School 2015 July 6
GBT Offset Gregorian + Prime Focusfor unblocked aperture Single Dish School 2015 July 6
GBT feeds andradiometers Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Antenna output noise: voltage and power TA = “antenna temperature” Ae = effective area S = flux density Pν = power per unit frequency k = Boltzmann’s constant ≈ 1.38 × 10−23 Joules per Kelvin Single Dish School 2015 July 6
The simplest radiometer Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Square-law detector: output noise voltage is proportional to input power Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Integrator output noise for: N = 50 samples N = 200 samples Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Differential radiometer Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Superheterodyne receiver Single Dish School 2015 July 6
Spectrometers and software-defined digital back ends Single Dish School 2015 July 6
To learn more about radio astronomy, Google Essential Radio Astronomy http://www.cv.nrao.edu/course/astr534/ERA.shtml or see the printed book (4 copies are on reserve) The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundationoperated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc. Single Dish School 2015 July 6