Sensitivity of Antenna Arrays for Long-Wavelength Radio Astronomy
Steven W. Ellingson

TL;DR
This paper develops a system model to estimate the sensitivity of low-frequency radio telescope arrays, accounting for Galactic noise and mutual coupling, and applies it to the LWA-1 array to improve sensitivity predictions.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for estimating the system equivalent flux density (SEFD) that considers Galactic noise correlation and mutual coupling effects in large antenna arrays.
Findings
Galactic noise correlation reduces array sensitivity away from zenith.
Beamforming can significantly improve sensitivity.
Mutual coupling impacts sensitivity but varies with conditions.
Abstract
A number of new and planned radio telescopes will consist of large arrays of low-gain antennas operating at frequencies below 300 MHz. In this frequency regime, Galactic noise can be a significant or dominant contribution to the total noise. This, combined with mutual coupling between antennas, makes it difficult to predict the sensitivity of these instruments. This paper describes a system model and procedure for estimating the system equivalent flux density (SEFD) - a useful and meaningful metric of the sensitivity of a radio telescope - that accounts for these issues. The method is applied to LWA-1, the first "station" of the Long Wavelength Array (LWA) interferometer. LWA-1 consists of 512 bowtie-type antennas within a 110 x 100 m elliptical footprint, and is designed to operate between 10 MHz and 88 MHz using receivers having noise temperature of about 250 K. It is shown that the…
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