Electronics Instrumentation for the Greenland Telescope
Derek Kubo, Chih-Chiang Han, Hiroaki Nishioka, Ryan Chilson, Ranjani, Srinivasan, Sheng- Feng Yen, Kuo-Chieh Fu, Homin Jiang, Kuan-Yu Liu, Ta-Shun, Wei, Chih-Wei Huang, Chen- Yu Yu, Peter Oshiro, Shu-Hao Chang, Chung-Cheng, Chen, Philippe Raffin, Yau-De Huang

TL;DR
This paper describes the design and implementation of the electronics instrumentation system for the Greenland Telescope, including receivers, frequency sources, digitization, and diagnostic tools, to support high-precision interferometry in extreme cold environments.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive electronics instrumentation setup tailored for the Greenland Telescope, enabling high-frequency observations and real-time spectral analysis in harsh conditions.
Findings
Successful integration of receivers covering multiple frequency bands
Implementation of a diagnostic test system for instrumental stability
Scalable fiber optic system for low-temperature operation
Abstract
The Greenland Telescope project has recently participated in an experiment to image the supermassive black hole shadow at the center of M87 using Very Long Baseline Interferometry technique in April of 2018. The antenna consists of the 12-m ALMA North American prototype antenna that was modified to support two auxiliary side containers and to withstand an extremely cold environment. The telescope is currently at Thule Air Base in Greenland with the long-term goal to move the telescope over the Greenland ice sheet to Summit Station. The GLT currently has a single cryostat which houses three dual polarization receivers that cover 84-96 GHz, 213-243 GHz and 271-377 GHz bands. A hydrogen maser frequency source in conjunction with high frequency synthesizers are used to generate the local oscillator references for the receivers. The intermediate frequency outputs of each receiver cover 4-8…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
