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Radio Astronomy The 2nd window on the Universe:

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Presentation on theme: "Radio Astronomy The 2nd window on the Universe:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Radio Astronomy The 2nd window on the Universe:
The atmosphere is transparent in the centimeter & meter bands < 5 mm mostly absorbed by molecular bands >15 m or so, absorbed or reflected by the ionosphere Draw picture for AM and FM and show plasma frequency formula:

2 Summary History of Radio Astronomy
Karl Bell Labs was researching noise in “short wave” radio communication. Aside from thunderstorms, he found (1932) a steady hiss, peaking with sidereal, not solar, time Localized to Sagittarius (center of galaxy) 20.5 MHz Grote Reber -- working at home, made a dish 160 MHz: confirmed Milky Way origin Also detected the Sun and Jupiter WWII led to development of radar; afterwards many of these physicists and electrical engineers became RADIO ASTRONOMERS: US, England, Netherlands, Australia, Germany & Russia

3 Astronomical Emitters of Radio Waves
Symbiotic stars (LR/LO < 10-6 for most stars!) “Microquasars”: some X-ray binaries Pulsars Supernova Remnants Radio Galaxies Quasars (and other AGN)

4 Big Advantages of Radio Astronomy
Can observe DAY & NIGHT Can penetrate clouds Only stopped by strong winds, thunderstorms and snow! Radio interferometry can produce better resolution than optical astronomy!

5 Disadvantages of Radio Astronomy
Powers received are very low, since each photon has a small h  need big collectors (dishes) Angular resolution is poor: /d Optical: to get ~0.5 arcsec, =500nm  d~50 cm (but can’t do much better w/o AO or optical interferometry) Radio: to get ~0.5 arcsec, =5cm  d~50 km Thus, radio astronomers need interferometers

6 Radio Telescopes NRAO Very Large Array NRAO Very Long Baseline Array
NRAO Green Bank Telescope TIFR Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope MPIfRA Effelsberg Radio Telescope NAIC Arecibo Radio Dish

7 VLA in Closest Array

8 More VLA photos 27 antennas, each 25 m diameter Maximum baseline 36 km

9 VLBA: 10 25m dishes, 8000km baseline

10  GBT: largest steerable RT: 110x100 m 
Asymmetric design keeps feeds off to side: no struts and diffaction from them Works from 3m down to 3mm Best for pulsar studies and molecular lines

11 GMRT: largest collecting area
Mesh design, good enough for long wavelengths 30 telescopes, 45 m aperture, maximum baseline: 25 km

12 Effelsberg: 2nd largest steerable dish
100 m aperture Good for 800 MHz to 96 GHz

13 Arecibo: 305m fixed dish

14 Some Basics of Radio Telescopes
Key considerations: Effective area  Gain (so antenna patterns are important) Beam width  Resolution Bandwidth, : different feeds at different  Wider  gives stronger signal, but narrower gives better spectral resolution Antenna temperature: TA = P / (kB ) Sizes of sources compared to beams Fluxes: Sun: 4 MHz  GHz SNR: Cas A: 2 MHz 1 Jansky = Jy = W/m2/Hz = erg/s/cm2/Hz Diagrams and equations on the board

15 Radiographs Colors usually indicate fluxes: red is brightest
Images of supernova remnants Pulsars and nearby shocks and jets Black holes: jets in microquasars Star forming regions Galactic structure Radio galaxies Quasars

16 Tycho’s SN remnant

17 Crab SNR and Pulsar

18 W50, SNR home of microquasar SS433

19 Cas A: SN1680?: Inner ejecta crossing swept up shell

20 SN 1993J in M81 from some VLBA+ VLA+ EVN+ NASA

21 SN 1993J from VLBA

22 Pulsars in Globular Cluster M62

23 “The Duck”, pulsar moving at ~500 km/s

24 Sco X-1: jets from pulsar in binary: VLBA + APT + EVN

25 SS 433: bullets at 0.26c

26 X-ray Nova GRO J1655-40: microquasar
Apparent v=1.3 c from actual speed of about 0.9c Approaching jet also has Doppler enhanced flux WRITE ON BOARD EQUATIONS FOR

27 Superluminal Motion? Vapp=Vsin/[1-(V/c)cos]
=1/(1-2)1/2 , with =V/c =1/ (1- cos) Sobs=Sem n+ , with n=2 for smooth jet and n=3 for knot or shock For large  and small  (~1/ ) this boosting factor can be > 10000!

28 Microquasar GRS 1915+105 Apparent v = 1. 25 c from v = 0
Microquasar GRS Apparent v = 1.25 c from v = 0.92 c BH mass about 16 Suns

29 Star Wind Interaction w/VLBA
Both O star and Wolf-Rayet star (evolved O star) eject strong winds and when they collide they form a curved hot region which radiates and accelerates charged particles

30 W49A: from VLA Ultracompact HII regions around newly forming hot stars using 7mm wavelength for high resolution

31 M17: star forming region w/ GBT
Omega nebula 3.6 cm or 8.4 GHz image

32 Atomic H in Our Galaxy: GBT et al.

33 M33: Doppler shifts show rotation
Used VLA measuring H 21cm spin-flip line to map atomic hydrogen, with spatial resolution of 10” Color coded to blue approaching and red receding: velocity resolution km/s, Includes Westerbork data for total intensity

34 3C31: FR I Radio Galaxy

35 3C 130 & 3C 449: FR I’s

36 3C75 in A400: Two Merging Cores of cD

37 M87 Jet to Bubble Montage

38 Compact Symmetric Source: 4C31.04

39 Canonical FR II: Cygnus A

40 Quasar: 3C 175

41 3C 227: RG, z=0.086 w/ Polarization Map
From Black et al., MNRAS, 256, 186

42 Quasars 3C215 (weird) & 3C263 (normal)

43 3C353: Peculiar FR II

44 VLBA + Space antenna HALCA: 1156+295

45 VLBA of 3C279: Apparent Superluminal Motion with Vapp=3.5c: really V=0.997c at viewing angle of 2 degrees


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