The HERA-19 Commissioning Array: Direction Dependent Effects
Saul A. Kohn, James E. Aguirre, Paul La Plante, Tashalee S. Billings,, Paul M. Chichura, Austin F. Fortino, Amy S. Igarashi, Roshan K. Benefo,, Samavarti Gallardo, Zachary E. Martinot, Chuneeta D. Nunhokee, Nicholas S., Kern, Philip Bull, Adrian Liu, Paul Alexander, Zaki S. Ali

TL;DR
This paper investigates the polarization response of the HERA-19 array, analyzing calibration stability and polarization leakage to improve understanding of foreground contamination in Epoch of Reionization measurements.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed polarization power spectrum analysis of the HERA-19 array, highlighting calibration challenges and the need for improved polarized calibration methods.
Findings
Calibration achieves reasonable amplitude accuracy and stability.
Excess linear polarization power suggests residual calibration errors.
Stokes V shows unexpected high power, indicating calibration issues.
Abstract
Foreground power dominates the measurements of interferometers that seek a statistical detection of highly-redshifted HI emission from the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). The chromaticity of the instrument creates a boundary in the Fourier transform of frequency (proportional to ) between spectrally smooth emission, characteristic of the strong synchrotron foreground (the "wedge"), and the spectrally structured emission from HI in the EoR (the "EoR window"). Faraday rotation can inject spectral structure into otherwise smooth polarized foreground emission, which through instrument effects or miscalibration could possibly pollute the EoR window. Using data from the HERA 19-element commissioning array, we investigate the polarization response of this new instrument in the power spectrum domain. We perform a simple image-based calibration based on the unpolarized diffuse emission…
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