3.8 Article

The synthesis telescope at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 145, Issue 3, Pages 509-524

Publisher

E D P SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1051/aas:2000257

Keywords

radio telescopes; aperture synthesis; wide-field imaging; HI spectroscopy

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We describe an aperture synthesis radio telescope optimized for studies of the Galactic interstellar medium (ISM), providing the ability to image extended structures with high angular resolution over wide fields. The telescope produces images of atomic hydrogen emission using the 21-cm H I spectral line, and, simultaneously, continuum emission in two bands centred at 1420 MHz and 408 MHz, including linearly polarized emission at 1420 MHz, with synthesized beams of 1' and 3.4' at the respective frequencies. A full synthesis can achieve a continuum sensitivity (rms) of 0.28 mJy/beam at 1420 MHz and 3.8 mJy/beam at 408 MHz, and the 256-channel HI spectrometer has an rms sensitivity of 3.5B(-0.5) sin delta K per channel, for total spectrometer bandwidth B MHz and declination delta. The tuning range of the telescope permits studies of Galactic and nearby extragalactic objects. The array uses 9 m antennas, which provide very wide fields of view of 3.1 degrees and 9.6 degrees (at the 10% level), at the two frequencies, and also allow data to be gathered on short baselines, yielding extremely good sensitivity to extended structure. Single-antenna data are also routinely incorporated into images to ensure complete coverage of emission on all angular scales down to the resolution limit. In this paper we describe the telescope and its receiver and correlator systems in detail, together with calibration and observing strategies that make this instrument an efficient survey machine.

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