60 research outputs found
Near term measurements with 21 cm intensity mapping: neutral hydrogen fraction and BAO at z<2
It is shown that 21 cm intensity mapping could be used in the near term to
make cosmologically useful measurements. Large scale structure could be
detected using existing radio telescopes, or using prototypes for dedicated
redshift survey telescopes. This would provide a measure of the mean neutral
hydrogen density, using redshift space distortions to break the degeneracy with
the linear bias. We find that with only 200 hours of observing time on the
Green Bank Telescope, the neutral hydrogen density could be measured to 25%
precision at redshift 0.54<z<1.09. This compares favourably to current
measurements, uses independent techniques, and would settle the controversy
over an important parameter which impacts galaxy formation studies. In
addition, a 4000 hour survey would allow for the detection of baryon acoustic
oscillations, giving a cosmological distance measure at 3.5% precision. These
observation time requirements could be greatly reduced with the construction of
multiple pixel receivers. Similar results are possible using prototypes for
dedicated cylindrical telescopes on month time scales, or SKA pathfinder
aperture arrays on day time scales. Such measurements promise to improve our
understanding of these quantities while beating a path for future generations
of hydrogen surveys.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. D. Addressed reviewer
comments. Changed figure format, added more detailed technical discussion,
and added forecasts for aperture arrays. Added references
Optimized Trigger for Ultra-High-Energy Cosmic-Ray and Neutrino Observations with the Low Frequency Radio Array
When an ultra-high energy neutrino or cosmic ray strikes the Lunar surface a
radio-frequency pulse is emitted. We plan to use the LOFAR radio telescope to
detect these pulses. In this work we propose an efficient trigger
implementation for LOFAR optimized for the observation of short radio pulses.Comment: Submitted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research
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A LOFAR observation of ionospheric scintillation from two simultaneous travelling ionospheric disturbances
This paper presents the results from one of the first observations of ionospheric scintillation taken using the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR). The observation was of the strong natural radio source Cassiopeia A, taken overnight on 18â19 August 2013, and exhibited moderately strong scattering effects in dynamic spectra of intensity received across an observing bandwidth of 10â80 MHz. Delay-Doppler spectra (the 2-D FFT of the dynamic spectrum) from the first hour of observation showed two discrete parabolic arcs, one with a steep curvature and the other shallow, which can be used to provide estimates of the distance to, and velocity of, the scattering plasma. A cross-correlation analysis of data received by the dense array of stations in the LOFAR âcoreâ reveals two different velocities in the scintillation pattern: a primary velocity of ~20â40 msâ1 with a north-west to south-east direction, associated with the steep parabolic arc and a scattering altitude in the F-region or higher, and a secondary velocity of ~110 msâ1 with a north-east to south-west direction, associated with the shallow arc and a scattering altitude in the D-region. Geomagnetic activity was low in the mid-latitudes at the time, but a weak sub-storm at high latitudes reached its peak at the start of the observation. An analysis of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and ionosonde data from the time reveals a larger-scale travelling ionospheric disturbance (TID), possibly the result of the high-latitude activity, travelling in the north-west to south-east direction, and, simultaneously, a smaller-scale TID travelling in a north-east to south-west direction, which could be associated with atmospheric gravity wave activity. The LOFAR observation shows scattering from both TIDs, at different altitudes and propagating in different directions. To the best of our knowledge this is the first time that such a phenomenon has been reported
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