Instrumentation for Radio Interferometers with Antennas on a Regular Grid
Deepthi Gorthi

TL;DR
This paper investigates calibration and data processing techniques for large, grid-based radio interferometers to reduce computational costs, enabling efficient imaging for Epoch of Reionization studies.
Contribution
It introduces real-time calibration strategies for grid antennas and baseline-dependent averaging methods to lower data rates without losing imaging efficiency.
Findings
Developed calibration methods operating on subsets of visibility matrices.
Achieved data rate reduction from 1 Tbps to 15 Gbps using baseline-dependent averaging.
Outlined signal processing pipeline for HERA with improved efficiency.
Abstract
In the past two decades, a rebirth of interest in low-frequency radio astronomy for 21 cm tomography of the Epoch of Reionization, has given rise to a new class of radio interferometers with antennas. The availability of low-noise receivers that do not require cryogenic cooling has driven down the cost of antennas, making it affordable to build sensitivity with numerous small antennas rather than large dish structures. However, the computational- and storage-costs of such radio arrays, determined by the scaling of visibility products required for calibration and imaging, become proportional to the cost of the array itself and drive up the overall cost of the radio telescope. When antennas in the array are built on a regular grid, direct-imaging methods based on spatial Fourier transforms of the array can be exploited to avoid computing the intermediate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Superconducting and THz Device Technology · Antenna Design and Optimization
