Revisiting the radio interferometer measurement equation. I. A full-sky Jones formalism
Oleg M. Smirnov

TL;DR
This series of papers revisits the radio interferometer measurement equation (RIME), extending it to full-sky and DDEs, demonstrating its advantages for calibration, and applying it to real data to achieve high dynamic range imaging.
Contribution
The papers extend RIME to full-sky and DDEs, providing a unified framework for calibration and demonstrating its practical benefits with real data.
Findings
Achieved a 1.6 million dynamic range image of 3C 147
Differential gain solutions reveal significant DDE information
Sources as faint as 2 mJy can serve as calibration beacons
Abstract
Since its formulation by Hamaker et al., the radio interferometer measurement equation (RIME) has provided a rigorous mathematical basis for the development of novel calibration methods and techniques, including various approaches to the problem of direction-dependent effects (DDEs). This series of papers aims to place recent developments in the treatment of DDEs into one RIME-based mathematical framework, and to demonstrate the ease with which the various effects can be described and understood. It also aims to show the benefits of a RIME-based approach to calibration. Paper I re-derives the RIME from first principles, extends the formalism to the full-sky case, and incorporates DDEs. Paper II then uses the formalism to describe self-calibration, both with a full RIME, and with the approximate equations of older software packages, and shows how this is affected by DDEs. It also gives…
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