Understanding synthesis imaging dynamic range
Robert Braun

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive framework for quantifying noise contributions in synthesis imaging, highlighting calibration challenges for small dishes and aperture arrays, and assessing their impact on achieving thermal noise limited performance.
Contribution
It introduces a general noise budget analysis framework applicable to various telescope systems and evaluates calibration challenges for upcoming aperture array instruments.
Findings
Calibration difficulty increases with smaller dish sizes.
Larger dishes (e.g., 25 m) mitigate calibration risks.
Achieving thermal noise limited imaging with aperture arrays is extremely challenging.
Abstract
We develop a general framework for quantifying the many different contributions to the noise budget of an image made with an array of dishes or aperture array stations. Each noise contribution to the visibility data is associated with a relevant correlation timescale and frequency bandwidth so that the net impact on a complete observation can be assessed. All quantities are parameterised as function of observing frequency and the visibility baseline length. We apply the resulting noise budget analysis to a wide range of existing and planned telescope systems that will operate between about 100 MHz and 5 GHz to ascertain the magnitude of the calibration challenges that they must overcome to achieve thermal noise limited performance. We conclude that calibration challenges are increased in several respects by small dimensions of the dishes or aperture array stations. It will be more…
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