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The Murchison Widefield Array: Design Overview

Authors :
Miguel F. Morales
Joseph Pathikulangara
Rachel L. Webster
Colin J. Lonsdale
Edward H. Morgan
N. Udaya Shankar
John D. Bunton
Lincoln J. Greenhill
Deepak Kumar
Justin C. Kasper
Ludi deSouza
Steven Burns
Frank H. Briggs
Steven Ord
K. S. Srivani
Errol Kowald
Roger J. Cappallo
Eric Kratzenberg
Randall B. Wayth
Divya Oberoi
M. R. Gopalakrishna
Jacqueline N. Hewitt
Alan R. Whitney
Mervyn J. Lynch
A. Roshi
Robert J. Sault
Brian E. Corey
P. A. Kamini
Mark Derome
Jonathan Kocz
B. B. Kincaid
Steven Tingay
Alan E. E. Rogers
L. Benkevitch
Mark Waterson
Sheperd S. Doeleman
Annino Vaccarella
Thiagaraj Prabu
Judd D. Bowman
Jamie Stevens
Joseph E. Salah
David Herne
Daniel A. Mitchell
Andrew Williams
Avinash A. Deshpande
S. Madhavi
Michael Matejek
Christopher L. Williams
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is a dipole-based aperture array synthesis telescope designed to operate in the 80-300 MHz frequency range. It is capable of a wide range of science investigations, but is initially focused on three key science projects. These are detection and characterization of 3-dimensional brightness temperature fluctuations in the 21cm line of neutral hydrogen during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR) at redshifts from 6 to 10, solar imaging and remote sensing of the inner heliosphere via propagation effects on signals from distant background sources,and high-sensitivity exploration of the variable radio sky. The array design features 8192 dual-polarization broad-band active dipoles, arranged into 512 tiles comprising 16 dipoles each. The tiles are quasi-randomly distributed over an aperture 1.5km in diameter, with a small number of outliers extending to 3km. All tile-tile baselines are correlated in custom FPGA-based hardware, yielding a Nyquist-sampled instantaneous monochromatic uv coverage and unprecedented point spread function (PSF) quality. The correlated data are calibrated in real time using novel position-dependent self-calibration algorithms. The array is located in the Murchison region of outback Western Australia. This region is characterized by extremely low population density and a superbly radio-quiet environment,allowing full exploitation of the instrumental capabilities.<br />9 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in Proceedings of the IEEE

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....482bf5af5f1827c080c48e7354b27651