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The Atacama Large MillimeterSubmillimeter Array Current Status

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Title: The Atacama Large MillimeterSubmillimeter Array Current Status


1
The Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array
Current Status
  • Chris Wilson
  • Canadian ALMA Project Scientist
  • McMaster University


2
ALMA Science Requirements
  • High Fidelity Imaging
  • Precise Imaging at 0.1 Resolution
  • Routine Sub-mJy Continuum Sensitivity
  • Routine mK Spectral Sensitivity
  • Wideband Frequency Coverage
  • Wide Field Imaging Mosaics
  • Submillimeter Receiver System
  • Full Polarization Capability

Highest priority for new ground-based facility in
the Long Range Plan!
3
ALMA Specifications
  • 54 12-m antennas, plus compact array of 12 7-m
    antennas at 5000 m site
  • Surface accuracy 25 mm, 0.6 reference pointing
    in 9m/s wind, 2 absolute pointing all-sky
  • Array configurations between 150m and 15km
    3 to 0.015 resolution at 300 GHz (1mm)
  • 10 bands in 31-950 GHz 183 GHz WVR. Initially
  • 86-116 GHz 3
  • 125-169 GHz 4
  • 211-275 GHz 6
  • 275-373 GHz 7
  • 385-500 GHz 8
  • 602-720 GHz 9
  • 787-950 GHz 10
  • 8 GHz BW, dual polarization
  • Correlator 4096 channels/IF (multi-IF), full
    Stokes

4
ALMA Specifications(continued)
  • Interferometry, mosaics, total-power observing
  • Data rate 6Mb/s average peak 60Mb/s
  • All data archived (raw images) pipeline to
    process
  • During full operations, the estimated flow of
    int/SD data into archive 100 Tb per year.
  • Project lifecycle online proposal tool, script
    generator, dynamic scheduling, raw data available
    plus a reference image with pipeline processing
    history, calibration data

5
ALMA Median Sensitivity
(1 minute 75 Quartile opacities lgt1mm, 25 l
lt1mm)
6
The ALMA Partnership
  • ALMA is a global partnership in astronomy to
    deliver a truly transformational instrument
  • North America (US, Canada, Taiwan)
  • Europe (via ESO)
  • East Asia (Japan, Taiwan)
  • Located on the Chajnantor plain of the Chilean
    Andes at 5000 m
  • ALMA will be operated as a single Observatory
    with scientific access via regional centers
  • North American ALMA Science Center (NAASC) is in
    Charlottesville
  • Total global budget for ALMA 1.3B (U.S.)

7
Canadians and ALMA
  • Construction contribution Band 3 (100 GHz)
    receivers, software
  • Operations funding money and people
  • Part of North American side of ALMA
  • Compete for observing time in common North
    American pool through proposals to the common
    ALMA TAC
  • Observing and user support through NAASC

8
ALMA Sites
  • Array Operations Site AOS 5000m Antennas,
    correlator, some (oxygenated) office space
  • Operations Support Facility OSF 3000m Array
    operation, equipment maintenance, living quarters
  • ALMA Test Facility ATF Socorro, VLA site
    prototype antennas, software development
  • Santiago Central Offices SCO Administration,
    scientific support. Will be located near ESO,
    currently Las Condes
  • Joint ALMA Observatory - JAO
  • ALMA Regional Centers ARCs ARC nodes
    interfaces to astronomy community

9
Approximate Schedule
  • First fringes ATF Q2 2007
  • First fringes Chile Q2 2009 (see later
    slides)
  • AOS, OSF facilities Complete
  • Antennas 15 now on site in
    assembly
  • first 3 accepted by AIV 4th June 2009
  • Front Ends 1 delivered, install Oct
    2008
  • 2 - end 2008
  • Correlator 1st quadrant being
    installed at AOS
  • ACA correlator
    installed at AOS
  • New 2-antenna
    correlator installed at OSF
  • Call for Early Science end of 2010
  • Early Science Q3 2011
  • Full Operations 2013

10
The push to the high site
  • ALMA is pushing to achieve closure phase at the
    high site before the end of this year
  • This target is the key driver for the entire
    project at the moment
  • To achieve this requires all of the necessary
    infrastructure and equipment to be in place
  • This activity is being masterminded by the ALMA
    AIV team, led by Joe McMullin
  • The path to the high site involves first
    establishing fringes at the OSF in a two antenna
    interferometer

11
ATF single dish results
Sgr B2 Spectrum97.9 GHz
Raster on Moon with Total Power detectors
simultaneously on 2 antennas
Not using production receivers, but verifying
software for control, tuning, correlator and data
reduction
11
12
ATF Interferometric spectrum Orion - 101 GHz,
April 2008
Not using production receivers, but verifying
software for control, tuning, correlator and data
reduction
13
Chajnantor Plateau looking north
V. Licancabur
CÂş Chajnantor
Pampa La Bola
Center of Array
14
Google-Earth view of site with antennas in the
most extended configuration baselines to 16km
14
15
12m Array
Simulation (!)
15
20th International Symposium on Space Terahertz
Technology
16
Roads Foundations
16
17
Foundations
  • Foundations for the Compact Array
  • nearly done.
  • Power and fibres next.

17
20th International Symposium on Space Terahertz
Technology
18
AOS Technical Building
AOS Technical Building - completed 2008
19
OSF
20
OSF
20
21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
Four MELCO Antennas being tested
(non-interferometrically!)
24
Two Vertex Antennas under test Nine more being
assembled
24
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
How to carry a 12 m telescope
28
Dishes measured by holography at 104 GHzUse
source on tower at 300m distance and correct for
the curved wavefront
28
29
Initial Map amplitude and phase
20th International Symposium on Space Terahertz
Technology
29
30
After adjustment
20th International Symposium on Space Terahertz
Technology
30
31
Pointing Vertex Metrology
32
Bands 3 (84-116 GHz), 6 (211-275 GHz), 7
(275-373 GHz), and 9 (602-720 GHz)
32
20th International Symposium on Space Terahertz
Technology
33
ALMA Band 3 (100 GHz)
being built at Herzberg Institute of
Astrophysics in Victoria B.C.
Lens
Feed Horn
OMT
Pol0 2SB Mixer Assembly
Pol1 2SB Mixer Assembly
ALMA Requirement
IF Amplifiers and Isolators
4 K Stage
15 K Stage
300 K Vacuum Flange
80 K Stage
ALMA Requirement
34
First FE/BE under test at OSF
35
20th International Symposium on Space Terahertz
Technology
35
36
Correlator first quadrant being installed
37
First Light!
38
First astronomical fringes at OSF30 April 2009
39
Next Steps
  • August - central LO to high site
  • October - Antennas to the high site
  • December - Closure phase
  • Start Science Verification
  • 20 months later start Early Science

40
For more info www.alma.cl
  • The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array
    (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a
    partnership of Europe, North America and East
    Asia in cooperation with the Republic of Chile.
    ALMA is funded in Europe by the European
    Organization for Astronomical Research in the
    Southern Hemisphere (ESO), in North America by
    the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) in
    cooperation with the National Research Council of
    Canada (NRC) and the National Science Council of
    Taiwan (NSC) and in East Asia by the National
    Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in
    cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in
    Taiwan. ALMA construction and operations are led
    on behalf of Europe by ESO, on behalf of North
    America by the National Radio Astronomy
    Observatory (NRAO), which is managed by
    Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI) and on behalf
    of East Asia by the National Astronomical
    Observatory of Japan (NAOJ). The Joint ALMA
    Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership
    and management of the construction, commissioning
    and operation of ALMA.

41
end
42
(1 minute 75 Quartile opacities lgt1mm, 25 l
lt1mm)
ALMA Median Sensitivity
43
Leroy, 2008, , Birth and feedback of massive
stars
44
Brogan, 2008, Birth and feedback of massive
stars
45
Krumholz, 2008, , Birth and feedback of massive
stars
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