Back to Search Start Over

Low-Frequency Imaging of Fields at High Galactic Latitude with the Murchison Widefield Array 32 Element Prototype

Authors :
Williams, C.
Hewitt, J.
Levine, A.
de Oliveira-Costa, A.
Bowman, Judd
Briggs, Frank
Gaensler, B.
Hernquist, Lars
Mitchell, D.
Morales, Miguel
Sethi, S.
Subrahmanyan, R.
Sadler, E.
Arcus, Wayne
Barnes, David
Bernardi, G.
Bunton, John
Cappallo, Roger
Crosse, B.
Corey, Brian.
Deshpande, Avinash
DeSouza, Ludi
Emrich, D.
Goeke, Robert
Greenhill, L.
Hazelton, Bryna
Herne, David
Kaplan, D.
Kasper, Justin
Kincaid, Barton
Koenig, R.
Kratzenberg, Eric
Lonsdale, Colin
Lynch, Mervyn
McWhirter, S.
Morgan, Edward
Oberoi, Divya
Ord, Stephen
Pathikulangara, Joseph
Prabu, T.
Remillard, Ron
Rogers, Alan
Roshi, Anish
Salah, J.
Sault, R.
Shankar, N Udaya
Srivani, K.
Stevens, J.
Tingay, Steven
Wayth, Randall
Waterson, Mark
Webster, Rachel
Whitney, Alan
Williams, A.
Wyithe, J.
Williams, C.
Hewitt, J.
Levine, A.
de Oliveira-Costa, A.
Bowman, Judd
Briggs, Frank
Gaensler, B.
Hernquist, Lars
Mitchell, D.
Morales, Miguel
Sethi, S.
Subrahmanyan, R.
Sadler, E.
Arcus, Wayne
Barnes, David
Bernardi, G.
Bunton, John
Cappallo, Roger
Crosse, B.
Corey, Brian.
Deshpande, Avinash
DeSouza, Ludi
Emrich, D.
Goeke, Robert
Greenhill, L.
Hazelton, Bryna
Herne, David
Kaplan, D.
Kasper, Justin
Kincaid, Barton
Koenig, R.
Kratzenberg, Eric
Lonsdale, Colin
Lynch, Mervyn
McWhirter, S.
Morgan, Edward
Oberoi, Divya
Ord, Stephen
Pathikulangara, Joseph
Prabu, T.
Remillard, Ron
Rogers, Alan
Roshi, Anish
Salah, J.
Sault, R.
Shankar, N Udaya
Srivani, K.
Stevens, J.
Tingay, Steven
Wayth, Randall
Waterson, Mark
Webster, Rachel
Whitney, Alan
Williams, A.
Wyithe, J.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is a new low-frequency, wide-field-of-view radio interferometer under development at the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory in Western Australia. We have used a 32 element MWA prototype interferometer (MWA-32T) to observe two 50 degrees diameter fields in the southern sky, covering a total of similar to 2700 deg(2), in order to evaluate the performance of the MWA-32T, to develop techniques for epoch of reionization experiments, and to make measurements of astronomical foregrounds. We developed a calibration and imaging pipeline for the MWA-32T, and used it to produce similar to 15' angular resolution maps of the two fields in the 110-200 MHz band. We perform a blind source extraction using these confusion-limited images, and detect 655 sources at high significance with an additional 871 lower significance source candidates. We compare these sources with existing low-frequency radio surveys in order to assess the MWA-32T system performance, wide-field analysis algorithms, and catalog quality. Our source catalog is found to agree well with existing low-frequency surveys in these regions of the sky and with statistical distributions of point sources derived from Northern Hemisphere surveys; it represents one of the deepest surveys to date of this sky field in the 110-200 MHz band.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1033967628
Document Type :
Electronic Resource