Surveying the Dynamic Radio Sky with the Long Wavelength Demonstrator Array
T. J. W. Lazio (1,2,9), T. E. Clarke (1), W. M. Lane (1), C. Gross, (1), N. E. Kassim (1), P. S. Ray (3), D. Wood (4), J. A. York (5), A., Kerkhoff (5), B. Hicks (1), E. Polisensky (1), K. Stewart (1), N. Paravastu, Dalal (6), A. S. Cohen (7), W. C. Erickson (8) ((1) NRL

TL;DR
This study used the LWDA to search for radio transients at 73.8 MHz, detecting solar flares and meteor reflections but no extragalactic transients, demonstrating the potential of all-sky imaging for low-frequency radio astronomy.
Contribution
It demonstrates the use of the LWDA for all-sky transient searches at low frequencies and discusses its implications for future low-frequency radio arrays.
Findings
Detected solar flares and meteor reflections.
No extragalactic transients above 500 Jy detected.
Event rate consistent with previous surveys at higher frequencies.
Abstract
This paper presents a search for radio transients at a frequency of 73.8 MHz (4 m wavelength) using the all-sky imaging capabilities of the Long Wavelength Demonstrator Array (LWDA). The LWDA was a 16-dipole phased array telescope, located on the site of the Very Large Array in New Mexico. The field of view of the individual dipoles was essentially the entire sky, and the number of dipoles was sufficiently small that a simple software correlator could be used to make all-sky images. From 2006 October to 2007 February, we conducted an all-sky transient search program, acquiring a total of 106 hr of data; the time sampling varied, being 5 minutes at the start of the program and improving to 2 minutes by the end of the program. We were able to detect solar flares, and in a special-purpose mode, radio reflections from ionized meteor trails during the 2006 Leonid meteor shower. We detected…
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