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Dick Plambeck UC Berkeley (for the CARMA consortium)

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Presentation on theme: "Dick Plambeck UC Berkeley (for the CARMA consortium)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Dick Plambeck UC Berkeley (for the CARMA consortium) www.mmarray.org

2 + UChicago SZA 8 3.5-m antennas
Berkeley-Illinois-Maryland Assn. array m diameter antennas Caltech array m antennas + UChicago SZA m antennas

3 people project manager: Tony Beasley OVRO D. Woody S. Scott J. Lamb D. Hawkins J. Carpenter A. Sargent G. Blake N. Scoville Berkeley D. Plambeck M. Wright A. Bolatto C. Kraybill M. Fleming L. Blitz W.J. Welch Maryland M. Pound P. Teuben K. Rauch S. Vogel L. Mundy A. Harris Illinois R. Plante D. Mehringer L. Snyder R. Crutcher L. Looney + programmers, engineers, technicians, postdocs, graduate students

4 antennas 3 different antenna diameters - a heterogeneous array
CARMA CARMA + SZA # antennas 15 23 # baselines 105 253 collecting area 773 m2 850 m2 3 different antenna diameters - a heterogeneous array exploit new algorithms for mosaicing, high fidelity imaging sensitive to wide range of spatial frequencies; image large objects

5 M33

6 BIMA mosaic of M33 CO GHz 759 pointing centers

7 BIMA mosaic of M33 148 GMCs detected
overlie HI filaments (HI image: Deul & van der Hulst 1987)

8 receiver bands freq (GHz) OVRO BIMA SZA for the 1mm and 3mm bands:
SIS 85-116 SIS (70-116) MMIC 29-37 HEMT 22 for the 1mm and 3mm bands: 4 GHz bandwidth, 1 polarization at first light continuum sensitivity: 2-3 mJy/beam, in 1 minute 230 GHz brightness sensitivity: 1 K for 1 km/sec channel, 1'' beam, in 1 hour

9 site selection and acquisition
requirements: within 60 minute drive of existing OVRO infrastructure elevation ft for good atmospheric transmission but low snow load 400-m diam flat area, + baselines to 2 km avoid environmental battles all such sites are in Inyo National Forest, require Environmental Impact Report

10 environmental studies done for 2 sites
Cedar Flat Juniper Flat OVRO

11 Juniper Flat – 7900’

12 Cedar Flat – 7300’

13 Cedar Flat: 20 min drive to OVRO on paved road, maintained (and plowed) by Caltrans
simulated antenna Highway 168

14 225 GHz  Percentiles 25% < 0.12 50% < 0.16 75% < 0.28

15 array configurations 5 antenna configurations, approx 55 pads
2 km max baseline

16 Cedar Flat E-array (most compact) synth beam 4.5" at 230 GHz
Highway 168

17 D-array synth beam 1.8"

18 C-array synth beam 0.8"

19 B-array synth beam 0.32"

20 A-array synth beam 0.13"

21 A-array u,v coverage for declination –30 10-m antennas only (15 baselines)

22 u,v coverage for declination –30 10-m vs 10-m, 6-m vs 6-m antennas only (60 baselines)

23 u,v coverage for declination –30 correlate all antennas (105 baselines)

24 A-array synthesized beam, declination –30 0.26 × 0.14" FWHM
5% contours

25 BIMA detection of 86 GHz radio flare in Orion
20 Jan 2003 beam 0.9 x 0.5'' Bower et al 2003

26 86 GHz flux increased from 40 mJy to 140 mJy in ~ 4 hrs
20 Jan UT 20 Jan UT

27 most compact array BIMA antennas within collision range
SZA provides even shorter spacings combine with single dish measurements from 10.4-m antennas

28 antenna transporter avoid ‘custom’ vehicle
50% of weight on tow vehicle for traction

29 transporter tow vehicle: 6-wheel drive military truck (Oshkosh MTVR)

30

31

32 Current Concept antenna transporter

33

34 fiberoptics all communication with antennas via 8 singlemode optical fibers length change with temperature is 1 part in 105 – need round trip phase measurement based on existing BIMA system

35 diurnal changes in fiber length (BIMA data from July 2002)
fiber lengths Sun hits fibers 135’ of fiber at outdoor air temp ( = 200 nsec)  ~ 2 psec/C  ~ 180°/C at 230 GHz outdoor air temp

36 BIMA round trip phase measurement
synth laser TRX cpl RX MXR phslck ref fiber 1 fiber 2 advantage: no electronics at the antenna, just a fiber coupler disadvantage: lengths of fibers 1 and 2 must track with temperature and flexure (requires loose tube fiber)

37 fiber lengths in each cable track each other within fraction of picosecond
other cables 3 fibers in one cable

38 raw phases on 3c454.3 through sunrise

39 phases on 3c454.3 through sunrise after correction

40 Caltech Cobra correlator
based on FPGAs, not custom correlator chips 4 GHz bandwidth 256 channels, 20 MHz resolution 15 baselines

41

42 CARMA first light correlator
uses Cobra hardware design 15 telescopes, 105 baselines 8 independent sections: may be positioned anywhere in 4 GHz IF band choose 2, 8, 31, 62, 125, 250, or 500 MHz bandwidth velocity resolution 0.04 to 40 km s-1/ channel at 1.3 mm separate SZA correlator: antennas, 28 baselines, 8 GHz bandwidth

43 Cobra: each board handles 5 baselines, MHz/baseline, 32 chans/baseline CARMA: reprogram FPGAs to handle baselines, add spectral line capability

44 education and public outreach

45 graduate student training
John Carlstrom Leslie Looney

46 BIMA summer school

47 public outreach

48 BIMA antenna move build new antenna bases (compatible with pad design, transporter) at high site dismantle antennas at Hat Creek, load onto trucks: 2 trucks/antenna 1 convoy = 2 trucks; travel time 4-5 days entire antenna move approx 8 weeks

49 moving the BIMA antennas: keep dish and feed legs intact

50 OVRO antennas will be dismantled to pass through “the narrows”

51 timeline Jan 2003 draft environmental document submitted Mar 2003
Forest Service decision: Cedar Flat Jun 2003 end of public comment period Aug 2003 Forest Service record of decision Oct 2003 appeals period ends early 2004 SZA operational at high site mid 2004 move OVRO and BIMA antennas to high site 2005 begin operation

52 Project Goal Build a new mm array emphasizing New science
Improved continuum/spectral-line sensitivity Unique: Image on all angular scales: HR, Wide FOV Operational flexibility Student training - “hands-on” New instrumentation & observational techniques Public outreach

53 outline site antenna configurations antenna transporter correlator
fiberoptic LO distribution scientific capabilities timeline


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