8 research outputs found

    Digital signal processing hardware for a fast fourier transform radio telescope

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    Thesis (M. Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 2012.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references.21-cm tomography is a devoloping technique for measuring the Epoch of Reionization in the universe's history. The nature of the signal measured in 21-cm tomography is such that a new kind of radio telescope is needed: one that scales well into very large numbers of antennas. The Omniscope, a Fast Fourier Transform telescope, is exactly such a telescope. I detail the implementation of the digital signal processing backend of a 32-channel interferometer designed to help characterize the non-digital parts of the system, starting at the point analog signal enters the FPGA and ending when it is written to a file on a computer. I also describe the accompanying subsystems, my implementation of a scaled-up, 64 channel design, and lay out a framework for expanding to 256 channels.by Jonathan L. Losh.M.Eng

    Brute-Force Mapmaking with Compact Interferometers: A MITEoR Northern Sky Map from 128 MHz to 175 MHz

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    We present a new method for interferometric imaging that is ideal for the large fields of view and compact arrays common in 21 cm cosmology. We first demonstrate the method with the simulations for two very different low-frequency interferometers, the Murchison Widefield Array and the MIT Epoch of Reionization (MITEoR) experiment. We then apply the method to the MITEoR data set collected in 2013 July to obtain the first northern sky map from 128 to 175 MHz at ∼2° resolution and find an overall spectral index of −2.73 ± 0.11. The success of this imaging method bodes well for upcoming compact redundant low-frequency arrays such as Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array. Both the MITEoR interferometric data and the 150 MHz sky map are available at http://space.mit.edu/home/tegmark/omniscope.html.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (AST-0908848)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (AST-1105835)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (AST-1440343

    Mapping our universe in 3D with MITEoR

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    Mapping our universe in 3D by imaging the redshifted 21 cm line from neutral hydrogen has the potential to overtake the cosmic microwave background as our most powerful cosmological probe, because it can map a much larger volume of our Universe, shedding new light on the epoch of reionization, inflation, dark matter, dark energy, and neutrino masses. We report on MITEoR, a pathfinder low-frequency radio interferometer whose goal is to test technologies that greatly reduce the cost of such 3D mapping for a given sensitivity. MITEoR accomplishes this by using massive baseline redundancy both to enable automated precision calibration and to cut the correlator cost scaling from N[superscript 2] to N log N, where N is the number of antennas. The success of MITEoR with its 64 dual-polarization elements bodes well for the more ambitious HERA project, which incorporates many identical or similar technologies using an order of magnitude more antennas, each with dramatically larger collecting area.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant AST-0908848)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant AST-1105835)MIT Kavli Instrumentation FundMassachusetts Institute of Technology. Undergraduate Research Opportunities Progra

    MITEoR: a scalable interferometer for precision 21 cm cosmology

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    We report on the MIT Epoch of Reionization (MITEoR) experiment, a pathfinder low-frequency radio interferometer whose goal is to test technologies that improve the calibration precision and reduce the cost of the high-sensitivity 3D mapping required for 21 cm cosmology. MITEoR accomplishes this by using massive baseline redundancy, which enables both automated precision calibration and correlator cost reduction. We demonstrate and quantify the power and robustness of redundancy for scalability and precision. We find that the calibration parameters precisely describe the effect of the instrument upon our measurements, allowing us to form a model that is consistent with χ[superscript 2] per degree of freedom <1.2 for as much as 80 per cent of the observations. We use these results to develop an optimal estimator of calibration parameters using Wiener filtering, and explore the question of how often and how finely in frequency visibilities must be reliably measured to solve for calibration coefficients. The success of MITEoR with its 64 dual-polarization elements bodes well for the more ambitious Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array project and other next-generation instruments, which would incorporate many identical or similar technologies
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