The eSMA: description and first results
Sandrine Bottinelli (1), Ken H. Young (2), Richard Chamberlin (3),, Remo P.J. Tilanus (4,9), Mark A. Gurwell (2), Dave J. Wilner (2), Hiroko, Shinnaga (3), Hiroshige Yoshida (3), Per Friberg (4), Huib Jan van Langevelde, (5,1), Ewine F. van Dishoeck (1,6)

TL;DR
The eSMA combines multiple telescopes to achieve high sensitivity and resolution at 345 GHz, enabling advanced astronomical observations and serving as a precursor to ALMA's capabilities.
Contribution
This paper introduces the eSMA facility, detailing its development, calibration, and initial science results, marking progress towards a high-resolution interferometer at 345 GHz.
Findings
First fringes at 345 GHz obtained in 2007
Successful initial science-verification observations
Detection of C/CO ratio in a galaxy at z=0.89
Abstract
The eSMA ("extended SMA") combines the SMA, JCMT and CSO into a single facility, providing enhanced sensitivity and spatial resolution owing to the increased collecting area at the longest baselines. Until ALMA early science observing (2011), the eSMA will be the facility capable of the highest angular resolution observations at 345 GHz. The gain in sensitivity and resolution will bring new insights in a variety of fields, such as protoplanetary/transition disks, high-mass star formation, solar system bodies, nearby and high-z galaxies. Therefore the eSMA is an important facility to prepare the grounds for ALMA and train scientists in the techniques. Over the last two years, and especially since November 2006, there has been substantial progress toward making the eSMA into a working interferometer. In particular, (i) new 345-GHz receivers, that match the capabilities of the SMA…
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