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26 April 2024 |
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Article overview
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Space-based Aperture Array For Ultra-Long Wavelength Radio Astronomy | Raj Thilak Rajan
; Albert-Jan Boonstra
; Mark Bentum
; Marc Klein-Wolt
; Frederik Belien
; Michel Arts
; Noah Saks
; Alle-Jan van der Veen
; | Date: |
18 May 2015 | Abstract: | The past decade has seen the rise of various radio astronomy arrays,
particularly for low-frequency observations below 100MHz. These developments
have been primarily driven by interesting and fundamental scientific questions,
such as studying the dark ages and epoch of re-ionization, by detecting the
highly red-shifted 21cm line emission. However, Earth-based radio astronomy
below frequencies of 30MHz is severely restricted due to man-made interference,
ionospheric distortion and almost complete non-transparency of the ionosphere
below 10MHz. Therefore, this narrow spectral band remains possibly the last
unexplored frequency range in radio astronomy. A straightforward solution to
study the universe at these frequencies is to deploy a space-based antenna
array far away from Earths’ ionosphere. Various studies in the past were
principally limited by technology and computing resources, however current
processing and communication trends indicate otherwise. We briefly present the
achievable science cases, and discuss the system design for selected scenarios,
such as extra-galactic surveys. An extensive discussion is presented on various
sub-systems of the potential satellite array, such as radio astronomical
antenna design, the on-board signal processing, communication architectures and
joint space-time estimation of the satellite network. In light of a scalable
array and to avert single point of failure, we propose both centralized and
distributed solutions for the ULW space-based array. We highlight the benefits
of various deployment locations and summarize the technological challenges for
future space-based radio arrays. | Source: | arXiv, 1505.4711 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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