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A clock stabilization system for CHIME/FRB Outriggers

Authors :
J. Mena-Parra
C. Leung
S. Cary
K. W. Masui
J. F. Kaczmarek
M. Amiri
K. Bandura
P. J. Boyle
T. Cassanelli
J.-F. Cliche
M. Dobbs
V. M. Kaspi
T. L. Landecker
A. Lanman
J. L. Sievers
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) has emerged as the prime telescope for detecting fast radio bursts (FRBs). CHIME/FRB Outriggers will be a dedicated very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) instrument consisting of outrigger telescopes at continental baselines working with CHIME and its specialized real-time transient-search backend (CHIME/FRB) to detect and localize FRBs with 50 mas precision. In this paper we present a minimally invasive clock stabilization system that effectively transfers the CHIME digital backend reference clock from its original GPS-disciplined ovenized crystal oscillator to a passive hydrogen maser. This enables us to combine the long-term stability and absolute time tagging of the GPS clock with the short and intermediate-term stability of the maser to reduce the clock timing errors between VLBI calibration observations. We validate the system with VLBI-style observations of Cygnus A over a 400 m baseline between CHIME and the CHIME Pathfinder, demonstrating agreement between sky-based and maser-based timing measurements at the 30 ps rms level on timescales ranging from one minute to up to nine days, and meeting the stability requirements for CHIME/FRB Outriggers. In addition, we present an alternate reference clock solution for outrigger stations which lack the infrastructure to support a passive hydrogen maser.<br />15 pages, 7 figures, submitted to AJ

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b9c46b483f1d5b4184ff06981e8405a