A Highly-Sensitive Cryogenic Phased Array Feed for the Green Bank Telescope
D. Anish Roshi, W. Shillue, J. R. Fisher, M. Morgan, J. Castro, W., Groves, T. Boyd, B. Simon, L. Hawkins, V. van Tonder, J. D. Nelson, J. Ray,, T. Chamberlain, S. White, R. Black, K. F. Warnick, B. Jeffs, R. Prestage

TL;DR
This paper presents the development and initial testing of a highly-sensitive cryogenic phased array feed system for the Green Bank Telescope, improving sensitivity and field-of-view for radio astronomy observations.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new cryogenic phased array feed system with enhanced sensitivity and larger field-of-view, including design, implementation, and initial performance results.
Findings
Measured system temperature of 17 K at 1.4 GHz, over 8 K improvement.
Achieved off-boresight system temperature increase of 13 K at half-power beam width.
Developed a real-time 150 MHz beamformer for improved observational capabilities.
Abstract
In this paper, we describe the development of a new L-band (1.4 GHz) Cryogenic Phased Array Feed (PAF) system, referred to as the GBT2 array. Results from initial measurements made with the GBT2 array are also presented. The PAF was developed for the Green Bank Telescope (GBT) as part of the Focal L-band Array for the GBT (FLAG) project. During the first stage of the development work (Phase I), a prototype cryogenic 19 element dual-polarized array with "Kite" dipole elements was developed and tested on the GBT. The measured system temperature over efficiency () ratio for the bore sight beam of the Kite array was 45.5 K at 1.55 GHz. The off-boresight shows an increase by 13 K at an offset equal to the half power beam width (7.2 at 1.7 GHz). Our measurements indicate that the off-boresight degradation and field-of-view (FoV) limitation of the Kite array…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Antenna Design and Optimization · Superconducting and THz Device Technology
