Mechanical and Optical Design of the HIRAX Radio Telescope
Benjamin R.B. Saliwanchik, Aaron Ewall-Wice, Devin Crichton, Emily R., Kuhn, Deniz \"Ol\c{c}ek, Kevin Bandura, Martin Bucher, Tzu-Ching Chang, H., Cynthia Chiang, Kit Gerodias, Kabelo Kesebonye, Vincent MacKay, Kavilan, Moodley, Laura B. Newburgh, Viraj Nistane

TL;DR
The paper details the mechanical and optical design optimizations of the HIRAX radio telescope array, aiming to improve its performance for cosmological measurements of baryon acoustic oscillations and dark energy.
Contribution
It introduces specific design modifications based on simulations, including dish focal ratio reduction, a redesigned feed support, and cabling improvements to enhance measurement accuracy.
Findings
Optimized dish focal ratio to reduce crosstalk.
Redesigned feed support to minimize beam asymmetries.
Developed an end-to-end simulation pipeline for system evaluation.
Abstract
The Hydrogen Intensity and Real-time Analysis eXperiment (HIRAX) is a planned interferometric radio telescope array that will ultimately consist of 1024 close packed 6 m dishes that will be deployed at the SKA South Africa site. HIRAX will survey the majority of the southern sky to measure baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) using the 21 cm hyperfine transition of neutral hydrogen. It will operate between 400-800 MHz with 391 kHz resolution, corresponding to a redshift range of and a minimum of ~0.003. One of the primary science goals of HIRAX is to constrain the dark energy equation of state by measuring the BAO scale as a function of redshift over a cosmologically significant range. Achieving this goal places stringent requirements on the mechanical and optical design of the HIRAX instrument which are described in this paper. This includes the simulations…
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