Glancing Through Massive Binary Radio Lenses: Hardware-Aware Interferometry With 1-Bit Sensors
Manuel S. Stein

TL;DR
This paper introduces a hardware-efficient binary radio telescope architecture that employs 1-bit sensors and probabilistic modeling to perform high-resolution interferometric imaging, demonstrating its potential for large-scale astronomical surveys.
Contribution
It proposes a novel binary sensing radio telescope design with probabilistic data processing, enabling high-resolution imaging with minimal hardware complexity.
Findings
Binary sensors can be effectively used for interferometric imaging.
The developed algorithm successfully reconstructs spatial power distribution from binary data.
Tests with LOFAR data validate the approach's potential for astronomical surveys.
Abstract
Energy consumption and hardware cost of signal digitization together with the management of the resulting data volume form serious issues for high-rate measurement systems with multiple sensors. Switching to binary sensing front-ends results in a resource-efficient layout but is commonly associated with significant distortion due to the nonlinear signal acquisition. In particular, for applications that require to solve high-resolution processing tasks under extreme conditions, it is a widely held belief that low-complexity -bit analog-to-digital conversion leads to unacceptable performance degradation. In the Big Science context of low-frequency radio astronomy, we propose a telescope architecture based on simplistic binary sampling, precise probabilistic modeling, and likelihood-oriented data processing. The main principles, building blocks, and advantages of such a radio telescope…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAntenna Design and Optimization · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Electromagnetic Compatibility and Measurements
