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HiFAST: an HI data calibration and imaging pipeline for FAST

Authors :
Jing, Yingjie
Wang, Jie
Xu, Chen
Liu, Ziming
Chen, Qingze
Liang, Tiantian
Xu, Jinlong
Cao, Yixian
Wang, Jing
Hu, Huijie
Zhang, Chuan-Peng
Guo, Qi
Gao, Liang
Ai, Mei
Gan, Hengqian
Gao, Xuyang
Han, Jinlin
Hou, Ligang
Hou, Zhipeng
Jiang, Peng
Kong, Xu
Li, Fujia
Liu, Zerui
Shao, Li
Pan, Hengxing
Pan, Jun
Qian, Lei
Sun, Jinghai
Tang, Ningyu
Yang, Qingliang
Zhang, Bo
Zhang, Zhiyu
Zhu, Ming
Jing, Yingjie
Wang, Jie
Xu, Chen
Liu, Ziming
Chen, Qingze
Liang, Tiantian
Xu, Jinlong
Cao, Yixian
Wang, Jing
Hu, Huijie
Zhang, Chuan-Peng
Guo, Qi
Gao, Liang
Ai, Mei
Gan, Hengqian
Gao, Xuyang
Han, Jinlin
Hou, Ligang
Hou, Zhipeng
Jiang, Peng
Kong, Xu
Li, Fujia
Liu, Zerui
Shao, Li
Pan, Hengxing
Pan, Jun
Qian, Lei
Sun, Jinghai
Tang, Ningyu
Yang, Qingliang
Zhang, Bo
Zhang, Zhiyu
Zhu, Ming
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST) has the largest aperture and a 19-beam L-band receiver, making it powerful for investigating the neutral hydrogen atomic gas (HI) in the universe. We present HiFAST (https://hifast.readthedocs.io), a dedicated, modular, and self-contained calibration and imaging pipeline for processing the HI data of FAST. The pipeline consists of frequency-dependent noise diode calibration, baseline fitting, standing wave removal using an FFT-based method, flux density calibration, stray radiation correction, and gridding to produce data cubes. These modules can be combined as needed to process the data from most FAST observation modes: tracking, drift scanning, On-The-Fly mapping, and most of their variants. With HiFAST, the RMS noises of the calibrated spectra from all 19 beams were only slightly (~ 5%) higher than the theoretical expectation. The results for the extended source M33 and the point sources are consistent with the results from Arecibo. The moment maps (0,1 and 2) of M33 agree well with the results from the Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey (AGES) with a fractional difference of less than 10%. For a common sample of 221 sources with signal-to-noise ratio S/N >10 from the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) survey, the mean value of fractional difference in the integrated flux density, $S_{\mathrm{int}}$, between the two datasets is approximately 0.005 %, with a dispersion of 15.4%. Further checks on the integrated flux density of 23 sources with seven observations indicate that the variance in the flux density of the source with luminous objects ($S_\mathrm{int}$ $ > 2.5$ Jy km s$^{-1}$) is less than 5%. Our tests suggest that the FAST telescope, with the efficient, precise, and user-friendly pipeline HiFAST, will yield numerous significant scientific findings in the investigation of the HI in the universe.<br />Comment: Accepted by SCPMA. 21 pages, 14 figures. The pipeline is accessible at https://hifast.readthedocs.io

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1430706600
Document Type :
Electronic Resource