Title: Radio Interferometry
1Radio Interferometry
2Outline of talk
- Differences between optical radio
interferometry - Basics of radio interferometry
- Connected interferometers VLBI
- How radio interferometers are used
3Differences between radio and optical
interferometry
- Wavelength larger in radio by factors of
103-106 - Resolution poorer than optical for given D, but
very large Ds (earth!) are used in radio VLBI,
so best resolution very good 0.1-1 mas - Effect of atmosphere Spatial scale of
atmospheric coherence length larger than antenna
for radio, smaller than telescope for optical,
timescale for variation minutes (radio) vs.
millisec (optical) can measure and calibrate
phases in radio (by observing nearby source of
known phase) but not in optical - Type of detection beam combination
- Radio signal (amplitude phase) detected
at antenna, digitized, then combined in
correlator - Optical light beams propagated to lab,
forms interference pattern before being detected - Signal processing Much easier to do complex
signal processing at low frequencies
4Basics of radio interferometry
5Point Source and a Single Dish
f hour angle R dish radius l wavelength
f
q angular resolution
6A Simple Interferometer
f
Note improved resolution!
7Signal delays
- Problem signal arrives at different antennae at
different times would yield no correlation - Solution add a signal delay by sending signal
from one antenna through one of delay lines - Set of cables of various specific lengths, giving
specific time delays - Maximum cable length comparable to maximum
baseline in interferometer, delay times in
10-1000s nanosec
8correlation
9Downconversion
- Signal from source is often downconverted to
lower frequency before correlation - Easier to handle electronic signals at lower
frequencies
10Cross-correlation
- Correlation reduces noise!
- (most of noise is uncorrelated)
11- Other important details
- Radio interferometers are used in radio astronomy
for aperture synthesis imaging. This technique
allows radio telescopes with resolution
equivalent to very large effective apertures to
be built using an array of widely spaced, smaller
antennas. Many variations on the technique are
possible, but all rely on collecting samples in
the Fourier transform plane (u-v plane) of the
image, taking advantage of the fact that the
interference pattern (fringes) performs a similar
mathematical operation to doing a Fourier
transform. Each point in the u-v plane
corresponds to a particular orientation and
physical separation of the antennas (baselines)
in the interferometer. Many samples in the u-v
plane are required. These can be collected using
an array of antennas (thus forming many
interferometers at once, each with different
baselines) or by motion of the interferometers
relative to the source. Such motion is usually
provided by the rotation of the earth ("earth
rotation synthesis") or in the case of Space VLBI
by the motion of an orbiting antenna. The results
of such measurements can yield an image of the
intensity of the radio emission at each frequency
in the band (i.e. a 3-dimensional data-set, where
one of the dimensions is frequency). - If the array of antennas is compact,
phase-synchronized local oscillators can be
distributed to the antennas and the signals from
the antennas can be directly connected to the
correlator. If the antennas are widely separated,
connecting them in real time is impractical. The
technique of Very Long Baseline Interferometry
(VLBI) was developed to overcome this problem --
stable (atomic hydrogen) maser "clocks" are used
for synchronization and the signals from the
antennas are recorded on magnetic tape. Although
this technique requires a more complex recording
and correlator system, the antennas can be any
distance apart, and very high resolution images
(typically 10 milliarcsec) can be made. - For Space VLBI the synchronization and the data
are handled by a telemetry station where
recording also takes place. The separation of the
antennas is sufficient to achieve microarcsec
resolutions. The time it takes to adequately fill
the aperture depends on the number of antennas
and their spacing in the array, as well as the
size and quality of the image. The number of
independent points in the image depends on the
number of independent points in the synthesized
aperture. A large, complex image will require
more coverage of the u-v plane than a small
image. Long observing time can partially
compensate for a small number of antennas. If
many antennas are used, then many spacings get
filled in simultaneously and it takes less time
to fill the aperture. In VLBI, where antennas can
be separated by continents (or are in space) it
is generally not possible to entirely fill the
aperture. In these cases, images of the small,
bright components of the radio sources are the
objects of interest.
12Connected interferometers VLBI
13Most Radio telescopes that do cutting edge
research are interferometers need large
spacings to get decent resolution
- Connected radio interferometers
- cm-m VLA WRST Merlin AAT GMST -gt SKA
- mm OVRO/BIMA/PdB/Nobeyama -gt ALMA
14Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI)
- Widely separated antennae not connected by cables
- Data recorded along with very accurate time
signals correlated later
15VLBI Uncertainty in correct delay
- Delay tracks phase center Q0 (absolute RADEC)
- If you know absolute positions of antennae AND
all atmospheric propogation effects, then you
know correct delay to use, and therefore you know
the location of phase center (absolute RADEC) - If NOT (often the case for VLBI), you search for
delay which gives maximum correlation, but know
only relative positions Q
16VLBI
- If the position of the antennas is not known to
sufficient accuracy or atmospheric effects are
significant, fine adjustments to the delays must
be made until interference fringes are detected.
If the signal from antenna A is taken as the
reference, inaccuracies in the delay will lead to
errors in the phases of the signals from tapes B
and C respectively. As a result of these errors
the phase of the complex visibility is difficult
to measure with a very long baseline
interferometer. - No phase ? no absolute positions, only relative
positions over small region of sky
17Except...
- By making use of closure phase and similar
relations for sets of 3 or more telescopes
(relations which hold independent of phase shifts
caused by atmosphere or instruments), one can
partly correct for errors and get more reliable
maps and absolute positions - Works best if large number of elements AND good
u-v coverage
18Todays VLBI arrays
- There are several VLBI arrays located in Europe,
the US and Japan. - European VLBI Network (EVN) -- most sensitive
VLBI array a part-time array with the data
being processed at the Joint Institute for VLBI
in Europe (JIVE). - US -- Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) dedicated
VLBI telescope - Combined EVN VLBA known as Global VLBI. This
provides the highest resolution, capable of
imaging the sky with a level of detail measured
in milliarcseconds.
19(No Transcript)
20Space VLBI
- First mission 1997-2003 VSOP (international)
- 8m dish in elliptical orbit, up to 3X earth
diameter - best resolution 90 marcsec (100x HST)
- ARISE (proposed 2008-13) 25m dish, 10 marcsec at
86 GHz (AGN engines water masers around AGN) - Moon?? (Roye 2000)
Multi-epoch imaging of the quasar 1928738 from
1997-2001 Seven 5 GHz images are shown above, the
first made in August 1997, the second in December
1997, and the last in September 2001. The
horizontal spacing between images is proportional
to the time between observations. Image
courtesy D.W. Murphy (JPL)
21e-VLBI The future?
- Recently it has become possible to connect the
VLBI radio telescopes in real-time. - In Europe, 6 telescopes are now connected to JIVE
with optical fibres at 1 Gigabit per second and
the first astronomical experiments using this new
technique (e-VLBI) have been successfully
conducted. - This speeds up and simplifies the observing
process significantly. - The data cannot be sent over normal internet
connections as the data-rate in a VLBI
observation is so high (far higher than the total
global internet traffic.)
22How interferometers are used
- If you know where the antennae are, you can
measure positions or make maps of astronomical
sources, or determine locations of radio
transmitters on ground or in space - If you know where the sources are (e.g. distant,
fixed quasars), positions of antennae can be
accurately measured ? geodesy motions of earth
23VLBI helps define the Celestial Reference Frame
- The radio system (positions derived from
radio VLBI observations to quasars) has replaced
the traditional optical reference system based on
star positions to define the International
Celestial Reference Frame. - The optical system which was used for the
last 200 years had an average accuracy (of star
positions) to about 0".01. The current average
accuracy of quasar positions observed by
radiosystems is about 0.1-0.2 milliarcseconds
(50-100 times better).
24geodesy
- Determine positions of widely-spaced antennae to
accuracy of 1 mm. - In geodetic experiments the correlator output
parameter of interest is the interferometer
delay. When delay is known for several different
radio sources at several different times, it is
possible to accurately determine the coordinates
of the antennas. - Measure complexities of Earths Rotation (polar
motion) precession, nutation, Irregular
shifts of earths axis due to gravitational
effects of sun and moon on equatorial bulge of
earth - Measure Tectonic motions of continental plates,
continental rebound from ice ages (motion 1-10
cm/yr) - In 1970s first radio programs to monitor
universal time and polar motion (USNO, NRL, NASA,
National Geodetic Survey)
25SUMMARY Radio VLBI science results
- Definition of the celestial reference frame
- Motion of the Earth's tectonic plates
- Regional deformation and local uplift or
subsidence. - Variations in the Earth's orientation and length
of day. - Maintenance of the terrestrial reference frame
- Measurement of gravitational forces of the Sun
and Moon on the Earth and the deep structure of
the Earth - Improvement of atmospheric models.
- Imaging high-energy particles being ejected from
black holes at enormous velocities - Measuring H20 masers in gas disks orbiting close
to central black holes in active galaxies - Imaging the surfaces of nearby stars at radio
wavelengths
26Signals in phase
27Signals in phase