Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/88951
Title: Characterization of the SKA1-low prototype station aperture array verification system 2
Authors: Macario, Giulia
Pupillo, Giuseppe
Bernardi, Gianni
Bolli, Pietro
Di Ninni, Paola
Comoretto, Giovanni
Mattana, Andrea
Monari, Jader
Perini, Federico
Schiaffino, Marco
Sokolowski, Marcin
Wayth, Randall
Broderick, Jess
Waterson, Mark
Labate, Maria Grazia
Chiello, Riccardo
Magro, Alessio
Booler, Tom
Mcphail, Andrew
Minchin, Dave
Bhushan, Raunaq
Keywords: Astronomical observatories -- Australia
Very large array telescopes -- Australia
Radio interferometers -- Data processing
Phased array antennas
Radio telescopes -- Technological innovations
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: SPIE - International Society for Optical Engineering
Citation: Macario, G., Pupillo, G., Bernardi, G., Bolli, P., Di Ninni, P., Comoretto, G.,...Bhushan, R. (2022). Characterization of the SKA1-Low prototype station aperture array verification system 2. Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems, 8(1), 011014.
Abstract: The low frequency component of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA1-Low) will be an aperture phased array located at the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory (MRO) site in Western Australia. It will be composed of 512 stations, each consisting of 256 log-periodic dual-polarized antennas, and will operate in the low frequency range (50 to 350 MHz) of the SKA bandwidth. The Aperture Array Verification System 2 (AAVS2), operational since late 2019, is the last full-size engineering prototype station deployed at the MRO site before the start of the SKA1-Low construction phase. The aim of this paper is to characterize the station performance through commissioning observations at six different frequencies (55, 70, 110, 160, 230, and 320 MHz) collected during its first year of activities. We describe the calibration procedure, present the resulting all-sky images and their analysis, and discuss the station calibratability and system stability. Using the difference imaging method, we also derive estimates of the SKA1-Low sensitivity for the same frequencies and compare them with those obtained through electromagnetic simulations across the entire telescope bandwidth, finding good agreement (within 13%). Moreover, our estimates exceed the SKA1-Low requirements at all considered frequencies by up to a factor of ∼2.3. Our results are very promising and allow for an initial validation of the AAVS2 prototype station performance, which is an important step toward the coming SKA1-Low telescope construction and science.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/88951
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