1,312 research outputs found
Post-correlation radio frequency interference classification methods
We describe and compare several post-correlation radio frequency interference
classification methods. As data sizes of observations grow with new and
improved telescopes, the need for completely automated, robust methods for
radio frequency interference mitigation is pressing. We investigated several
classification methods and find that, for the data sets we used, the most
accurate among them is the SumThreshold method. This is a new method formed
from a combination of existing techniques, including a new way of thresholding.
This iterative method estimates the astronomical signal by carrying out a
surface fit in the time-frequency plane. With a theoretical accuracy of 95%
recognition and an approximately 0.1% false probability rate in simple
simulated cases, the method is in practice as good as the human eye in finding
RFI. In addition it is fast, robust, does not need a data model before it can
be executed and works in almost all configurations with its default parameters.
The method has been compared using simulated data with several other mitigation
techniques, including one based upon the singular value decomposition of the
time-frequency matrix, and has shown better results than the rest.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures (11 in colour). The software that was used in
the article can be downloaded from http://www.astro.rug.nl/rfi-software
FLAGCAL:A flagging and calibration package for radio interferometric data
We describe a flagging and calibration pipeline intended for making quick
look images from GMRT data. The package identifies and flags corrupted
visibilities, computes calibration solutions and interpolates these onto the
target source. These flagged calibrated visibilities can be directly imaged
using any standard imaging package. The pipeline is written in "C" with the
most compute intensive algorithms being parallelized using OpenMP.Comment: 15 Pages, 6 figures, 2 Tables, Accepted for publication in the
Experimental Astronomy Journa
Post-correlation filtering techniques for off-axis source and RFI removal
Techniques to improve the data quality of interferometric radio observations
are considered. Fundaments of fringe frequencies in the uv-plane are discussed
and filters are used to attenuate radio-frequency interference (RFI) and
off-axis sources. Several new applications of filters are introduced and
tested. A low-pass filter in time and frequency direction on single baseline
data is successfully used to lower the noise in the area of interest and to
remove sidelobes coming from unmodelled off-axis sources and RFI. Related side
effects of data integration, averaging and gridding are analysed, and shown to
be able to cause ghosts and an increase in noise, especially when using long
baselines or interferometric elements that have a large field of view. A novel
projected fringe low-pass filter is shown to be potentially useful for first
order source separation. Initial tests show that the filters can be several
factors faster compared to common source separation techniques such as peeling
and a variant of peeling that is currently being tested on LOFAR observations
called "demixed peeling". Further testing is required to support the
performance of the filters.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A desalination guide for South African municipal engineers
Municipalities need to develop Water Services Development Plans (WSDPs) as a first requirement in their budgetary process, and need to be made aware of the options that are available to provide more than basic services. While 25./personEd has been set as the minimum basic water supply and while many consumers receive far in excess of this amount, there are areas of the country where water of acceptable quality is not available for household use. However, in many areas adequate quantities of saline water may be, or are, readily available. This is especially the case for coastal cities and towns.The cost of treating water is only part of the total cost of making drinking water available to the consumer. This together with the fact that membrane technology is becoming more affordable and that energy can be recovered, makes the desalination of water viable for domestic purposes.A desk study, funded by the Department Water Affairs and Forestry and managed by the Water Research Commission, was undertaken to identify treatment options for desalinating seawater from both the Indian and Atlantic oceans or brackish water from boreholes. The specific objectives of the project were to compile a Guide on the technologies that can be implemented in South Africa to treat saline water to drinking water standards, to identify the pretreatment that is necessary, and to present guidelines on operational, maintenance, management and environmental aspects relevant to the selection and use of these technologies. An important aspect was also to quantify the capital and operating costs for planning purposes of the different components needed to successfully bring the water to the accepted standards for potable and domestic use.Of particular importance for the South African application was to identify the level of skills required for daily operation of the desalination plants, the level of skills required to provide technical back-up and advice, and to identify and advise on the competencies, training needs and capacity building required at operator and management levels. Lastly, the relevant local environmental legislations governing desalination were also identified
A new strategic framework for water-related health research
The aim of this study was to compile a new strategic framework to guide the funding and management of research in waterrelated human health in South Africa. This framework had to identify the research areas of highest need in the country and provide an effective, yet simple, tool for the management of research projects. A review of current water-related human health research was first undertaken. Using this review as background document, input was solicited from key people in Government, water boards, metro councils, science councils and universities. As part of the study, the country’s research support infrastructure for water-related health research was investigated. The framework was finalised at a stakeholder workshop. A structure of Thrust Areas, with Programmes under each Thrust Area, was suggested for research management and funding. A matrix system of research thrusts versus impacts/risks, interventions and governance was further constructed to assist in the identification of research gaps, rendering the framework a very useful tool in the funding and management of water-related human health research.Keywords: water, public health, research needs, research managemen
Foregrounds for observations of the cosmological 21 cm line: II. Westerbork observations of the fields around 3C196 and the North Celestial Pole
In the coming years a new insight into galaxy formation and the thermal
history of the Universe is expected to come from the detection of the highly
redshifted cosmological 21 cm line. The cosmological 21 cm line signal is
buried under Galactic and extragalactic foregrounds which are likely to be a
few orders of magnitude brighter. Strategies and techniques for effective
subtraction of these foreground sources require a detailed knowledge of their
structure in both intensity and polarization on the relevant angular scales of
1-30 arcmin. We present results from observations conducted with the Westerbork
telescope in the 140-160 MHz range with 2 arcmin resolution in two fields
located at intermediate Galactic latitude, centred around the bright quasar
3C196 and the North Celestial Pole. They were observed with the purpose of
characterizing the foreground properties in sky areas where actual observations
of the cosmological 21 cm line could be carried out. The polarization data were
analysed through the rotation measure synthesis technique. We have computed
total intensity and polarization angular power spectra. Total intensity maps
were carefully calibrated, reaching a high dynamic range, 150000:1 in the case
of the 3C196 field. [abridged]Comment: 20 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. A version with
full resolution figures is available at
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~bernardi/NCP_3C196/bernardi.pd
Wide-field LOFAR-LBA power-spectra analyses: Impact of calibration, polarization leakage and ionosphere
Contamination due to foregrounds (Galactic and Extra-galactic), calibration
errors and ionospheric effects pose major challenges in detection of the cosmic
21 cm signal in various Epoch of Reionization (EoR) experiments. We present the
results of a pilot study of a field centered on 3C196 using LOFAR Low Band
(56-70 MHz) observations, where we quantify various wide field and calibration
effects such as gain errors, polarized foregrounds, and ionospheric effects. We
observe a `pitchfork' structure in the 2D power spectrum of the polarized
intensity in delay-baseline space, which leaks into the modes beyond the
instrumental horizon (EoR/CD window). We show that this structure largely
arises due to strong instrumental polarization leakage () towards
{Cas\,A} ( kJy at 81 MHz, brightest source in northern sky), which is
far away from primary field of view. We measure an extremely small ionospheric
diffractive scale ( m at 60 MHz) towards {Cas\,A}
resembling pure Kolmogorov turbulence compared to
km towards zenith at 150 MHz for typical ionospheric conditions. This is one of
the smallest diffractive scales ever measured at these frequencies. Our work
provides insights in understanding the nature of aforementioned effects and
mitigating them in future Cosmic Dawn observations (e.g. with SKA-low and HERA)
in the same frequency window.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Prospects for detecting the 21cm forest from the diffuse intergalactic medium with LOFAR
We discuss the feasibility of the detection of the 21cm forest in the diffuse
IGM with the radio telescope LOFAR. The optical depth to the 21cm line has been
derived using simulations of reionization which include detailed radiative
transfer of ionizing photons. We find that the spectra from reionization models
with similar total comoving hydrogen ionizing emissivity but different
frequency distribution look remarkably similar. Thus, unless the reionization
histories are very different from each other (e.g. a predominance of UV vs.
x-ray heating) we do not expect to distinguish them by means of observations of
the 21cm forest. Because the presence of a strong x-ray background would make
the detection of 21cm line absorption impossible, the lack of absorption could
be used as a probe of the presence/intensity of the x-ray background and the
thermal history of the universe. Along a random line of sight LOFAR could
detect a global suppression of the spectrum from z>12, when the IGM is still
mostly neutral and cold, in contrast with the more well-defined, albeit broad,
absorption features visible at lower redshift. Sharp, strong absorption
features associated with rare, high density pockets of gas could be detected
also at z~7 along preferential lines of sight.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. MNRAS, in pres
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