VLBI observations of jupiter with the initial test station of LOFAR and the nancay decametric array
A. Nigl, P. Zarka, J. Kuijpers, H. Falcke, L. Baehren, and L. Denis

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the capability of low-frequency VLBI to observe Jupiter's radio emissions with high resolution over intercontinental baselines, confirming the potential for detailed planetary radio imaging.
Contribution
First successful broadband VLBI observations of Jupiter using LOFAR and Nancay arrays at 20 MHz over 700 km baselines, achieving arcsecond resolution and phase coherence.
Findings
Detected Jupiter's strong burst emission with microsecond detail
Achieved arcsecond angular resolution at low frequencies
Confirmed phase coherence over hundreds of milliseconds
Abstract
AIMS: To demonstrate and test the capability of the next generation of low-frequency radio telescopes to perform high resolution observations across intra-continental baselines. Jupiter's strong burst emission is used to perform broadband full signal cross-correlations on time intervals of up to hundreds of milliseconds. METHODS: Broadband VLBI observations at about 20 MHz on a baseline of ~50000 wavelengths were performed to achieve arcsecond angular resolution. LOFAR's Initial Test Station (LOFAR/ITS, The Netherlands) and the Nancay Decametric Array (NDA, France) digitize the measured electric field with 12 bit and 14 bit in a 40 MHz baseband. The fine structure in Jupiter's signal was used for data synchronization prior to correlation on the time-series data. RESULTS: Strong emission from Jupiter was detected during snapshots of a few seconds and detailed features down to microsecond…
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