Solar Orbiter/RPW antenna calibration in the radio domain and its application to type III burst observations
A. Vecchio, M.Maksimovic, V. Krupar, X. Bonnin, A. Zaslavsky, P. L., Astier, M. Dekkali, B. Cecconi, S.D. Bale, T. Chust, E. Guilhem, Yu. V., Khotyaintsev, V. Krasnoselskikh, M. Kretzschmar, E. Lorf\`evre, D., Plettemeier, J. Sou\v{c}ek, M. Steller, \v{S}. \v{S}tver\'ak, P.

TL;DR
This paper calibrates Solar Orbiter's RPW antenna system using space observations and type III bursts, enabling conversion of measured signals into physical flux densities and revealing scattering effects during propagation.
Contribution
It presents the first calibration of the RPW antenna system in space and demonstrates its application to type III burst observations, improving measurement accuracy.
Findings
Effective length of RPW dipoles agrees with ground measurements.
Type III burst fluxes show scattering effects during propagation.
Calibration enables accurate flux density measurements in space.
Abstract
In order to allow for a comparison with the measurements from other antenna systems, the voltage power spectral density measured by the Radio and Plasma waves receiver (RPW) on board Solar Orbiter needs to be converted into physical quantities that depend on the intrinsic properties of the radiation itself.The main goal of this study is to perform a calibration of the RPW dipole antenna system that allows for the conversion of the voltage power spectral density measured at the receiver's input into the incoming flux density. We used space observations from the Thermal Noise Receiver (TNR) and the High Frequency Receiver (HFR) to perform the calibration of the RPW dipole antenna system. Observations of type III bursts by the Wind spacecraft are used to obtain a reference radio flux density for cross-calibrating the RPW dipole antennas. The analysis of a large sample of HFR observations…
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