What is the SKA-Low Sensitivity for Your Favourite Radio Source ?
M. Sokolowski, S. J. Tingay, D. B. Davidson, R. B. Wayth, D. Ung, J., W. Broderick, B. Juswardy, M. Kovaleva, G. Macario, G. Pupillo, A. Sutinjo

TL;DR
This paper presents a sensitivity calculator for SKA-Low, enabling accurate sensitivity predictions for various sky directions, frequencies, and times, based on pre-computed data and validated with real station measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive sensitivity prediction tool for SKA-Low, utilizing a database of pre-computed values and validated with real observational data.
Findings
Sensitivity varies with pointing direction and local sidereal time.
The calculator accurately predicts sensitivity across frequencies and directions.
Validation shows good agreement between predictions and actual measurements.
Abstract
The SKA will be the largest radio astronomy observatory ever built, providing unprecedented sensitivity over a very broad frequency (50 MHz to 15.3 GHz). The SKA-Low (50 - 350 MHz), will be built at the MRO in Western Australia. It will consist of 512 stations each composed of 256 dual-polarised antennas, and the sensitivity of an individual station is pivotal to the performance of the entire SKA-Low telescope. The answer to the question in the title is, it depends. The sensitivity of a low frequency array, such as an SKA-Low station, depends strongly on the pointing direction of the digitally formed station beam and the local sidereal time (LST), and is different for the two orthogonal polarisations of the antennas. The accurate prediction of the SKA-Low sensitivity in an arbitrary direction in the sky is crucial for future observation planning. We present here a sensitivity calculator…
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