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Characterization of the John A. Galt telescope for radio holography with CHIME

Authors :
Reda, Alex
Pinsonneault-Marotte, Tristan
Deng, Meiling
Amiri, Mandana
Bandura, Kevin
Chakraborty, Arnab
Foreman, Simon
Halpern, Mark
Hill, Alex S.
Höfer, Carolin
Kania, Joseph
Landecker, T. L.
MacEachern, Joshua
Masui, Kiyoshi
Mena-Parra, Juan
Milutinovic, Nikola
Newburgh, Laura
Ordog, Anna
Paul, Sourabh
Shaw, J. Richard
Siegel, Seth R.
Smegal, Rick
Wang, Haochen
Wulf, Dallas
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) will measure the 21 cm emission of astrophysical neutral hydrogen to probe large scale structure at redshifts z=0.8-2.5. However, detecting the 21 cm signal beneath substantially brighter foregrounds remains a key challenge. Due to the high dynamic range between 21 cm and foreground emission, an exquisite calibration of instrument systematics, notably the telescope beam, is required to successfully filter out the foregrounds. One technique being used to achieve a high fidelity measurement of the CHIME beam is radio holography, wherein signals from each of CHIME's analog inputs are correlated with the signal from a co-located reference antenna, the 26 m John A. Galt telescope, as the 26 m Galt telescope tracks a bright point source transiting over CHIME. In this work we present an analysis of several of the Galt telescope's properties. We employ driftscan measurements of several bright sources, along with background estimates derived from the 408 MHz Haslam map, to estimate the Galt system temperature. To determine the Galt telescope's beam shape, we perform and analyze a raster scan of the bright radio source Cassiopeia A. Finally, we use early holographic measurements to measure the Galt telescope's geometry with respect to CHIME for the holographic analysis of the CHIME and Galt interferometric data set.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.13876
Document Type :
Working Paper