494 research outputs found
Fundamental Imaging Limits of Radio Telescope Arrays
The fidelity of radio astronomical images is generally assessed by practical
experience, i.e. using rules of thumb, although some aspects and cases have
been treated rigorously. In this paper we present a mathematical framework
capable of describing the fundamental limits of radio astronomical imaging
problems. Although the data model assumes a single snapshot observation, i.e.
variations in time and frequency are not considered, this framework is
sufficiently general to allow extension to synthesis observations. Using tools
from statistical signal processing and linear algebra, we discuss the
tractability of the imaging and deconvolution problem, the redistribution of
noise in the map by the imaging and deconvolution process, the covariance of
the image values due to propagation of calibration errors and thermal noise and
the upper limit on the number of sources tractable by self calibration. The
combination of covariance of the image values and the number of tractable
sources determines the effective noise floor achievable in the imaging process.
The effective noise provides a better figure of merit than dynamic range since
it includes the spatial variations of the noise. Our results provide handles
for improving the imaging performance by design of the array.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Multisource Self-calibration for Sensor Arrays
Calibration of a sensor array is more involved if the antennas have direction
dependent gains and multiple calibrator sources are simultaneously present. We
study this case for a sensor array with arbitrary geometry but identical
elements, i.e. elements with the same direction dependent gain pattern. A
weighted alternating least squares (WALS) algorithm is derived that iteratively
solves for the direction independent complex gains of the array elements, their
noise powers and their gains in the direction of the calibrator sources. An
extension of the problem is the case where the apparent calibrator source
locations are unknown, e.g., due to refractive propagation paths. For this
case, the WALS method is supplemented with weighted subspace fitting (WSF)
direction finding techniques. Using Monte Carlo simulations we demonstrate that
both methods are asymptotically statistically efficient and converge within two
iterations even in cases of low SNR.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Die ekonomiese en kulturele selfstandingheid van die Afrikaner
Suid-Afrika het in die afgelope tien jaar ’n enorme ontwikkeling deur gemaak. Hierdie ontwikkeling het oor die algemeen groot voorspoed vir die Unie gebring, maar tegelykertyd is ’n aantal probleme geskep wat vir ’n deel altans, by ’n meer sistematiese beplanning vermy kon gewees het
Redundancy Calibration of Phased Array Stations
Our aim is to assess the benefits and limitations of using the redundant
visibility information in regular phased array systems for improving the
calibration.
Regular arrays offer the possibility to use redundant visibility information
to constrain the calibration of the array independent of a sky model and a beam
models of the station elements. It requires a regular arrangement in the
configuration of array elements and identical beam patterns.
We revised a calibration method for phased array stations using the redundant
visibility information in the system and applied it successfully to a LOFAR
station. The performance and limitations of the method were demonstrated by
comparing its use on real and simulated data. The main limitation is the mutual
coupling between the station elements, which leads to non-identical beams and
stronger baseline dependent noise. Comparing the variance of the estimated
complex gains with the Cramer-Rao Bound (CRB) indicates that redundancy is a
stable and optimum method for calibrating the complex gains of the system.
Our study shows that the use of the redundant visibility does improve the
quality of the calibration in phased array systems. In addition it provides a
powerful tool for system diagnostics. Our results demonstrate that designing
redundancy in both the station layout and the array configuration of future
aperture arrays is strongly recommended. In particular in the case of the
Square Kilometre Array with its dynamic range requirement which surpasses any
existing array by an order of magnitude.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in the A&A in Section
13, acceptance date: 1st May 2012. NOTE: Please contact the first author for
high resolution figure
Fast gain calibration in radio astronomy using alternating direction implicit methods: Analysis and applications
Context. Modern radio astronomical arrays have (or will have) more than one
order of magnitude more receivers than classical synthesis arrays, such as the
VLA and the WSRT. This makes gain calibration a computationally demanding task.
Several alternating direction implicit (ADI) approaches have therefore been
proposed that reduce numerical complexity for this task from
to , where is the number of receive paths to be
calibrated.
Aims. We present an ADI method, show that it converges to the optimal
solution, and assess its numerical, computational and statistical performance.
We also discuss its suitability for application in self-calibration and report
on its successful application in LOFAR standard pipelines.
Methods. Convergence is proved by rigorous mathematical analysis using a
contraction mapping. Its numerical, algorithmic, and statistical performance,
as well as its suitability for application in self-calibration, are assessed
using simulations.
Results. Our simulations confirm the complexity and
excellent numerical and computational properties of the algorithm. They also
confirm that the algorithm performs at or close to the Cramer-Rao bound (CRB,
lower bound on the variance of estimated parameters). We find that the
algorithm is suitable for application in self-calibration and discuss how it
can be included. We demonstrate an order-of-magnitude speed improvement in
calibration over traditional methods on actual LOFAR data.
Conclusions. In this paper, we demonstrate that ADI methods are a valid and
computationally more efficient alternative to traditional gain calibration
method and we report on its successful application in a number of actual data
reduction pipelines.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Calibration Challenges for Future Radio Telescopes
Instruments for radio astronomical observations have come a long way. While
the first telescopes were based on very large dishes and 2-antenna
interferometers, current instruments consist of dozens of steerable dishes,
whereas future instruments will be even larger distributed sensor arrays with a
hierarchy of phased array elements. For such arrays to provide meaningful
output (images), accurate calibration is of critical importance. Calibration
must solve for the unknown antenna gains and phases, as well as the unknown
atmospheric and ionospheric disturbances. Future telescopes will have a large
number of elements and a large field of view. In this case the parameters are
strongly direction dependent, resulting in a large number of unknown parameters
even if appropriately constrained physical or phenomenological descriptions are
used. This makes calibration a daunting parameter estimation task, that is
reviewed from a signal processing perspective in this article.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 20 subfigures The title quoted in the meta-data
is the title after release / final editing
Efficient Prediction of Array Element Patterns Using Physics-Based Expansions and a Single Far-Field Measurement
A method is proposed to predict the antenna array beam through employing a relatively small set of physics-based basis functions-called characteristic basis function patterns (CBFPs)-for modeling the embedded element patterns. The primary CBFP can be measured or extracted from numerical simulations, while additional (secondary) CBFPs are derived from the primary one. Furthermore, each numerically generated CBFP, which is typically simulated/measured for discrete directions only, can in turn be approximated by analytical basis functions with fixed expansion coefficients to evaluate the resulting array pattern at any angle through interpolation. This hierarchical basis reduces the number of unknown expansion coefficients significantly. Accordingly, the CBFP expansion coefficients can be determined through a single far-field measurement of only a few reference sources in the field of view. This is particularly important for multibeam array applications where only a limited number of reference sources are available for predicting the beam shape. Furthermore, this instantaneous beam calibration is fast, i.e., potentially capable to speed up the array calibration by one or two orders of magnitude, which is particularly important if the antenna radiation characteristics are subject to drifts
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