Basic Radio Interferometer
Joachim Köppen DF3GJ ... Kiel, Aug 2016
Some brief explanations
- This is a simulation of a basic radio interferometer. It consists of
of two (or three) antennas placed in a row at specifiable distances.
All antennas are parabolic dishes of the same diameter and work at the
specified frequency. There also is the choice of a single
antenna, for comparison.
- The antenna pattern of a single dish is displayed by the green button
antenna. One may choose between a sinc(x) = sin(x)/x and a Gaussian
pattern. The Half Power Beam Width is computed from the wavelength and
the antenna diameter.
- The Interferometer can be operated in two modes: either all antennas
are pointed to the zenith and the source passes over them (left) or
the antennas track the source while it crosses the sky (right). In
either mode the angle of the source is measured with respect to
the zenith.
When the antennas are fixed on the zenith, the fringe pattern is
modulated with the pattern of the individual antenna.
- Several simple sky sources are available, with a specifiable angular diameter:
top hat: the surface brightness is constant across the source,
sun: source with limb darkening,
triangle and a gaussian. A single 1-D source can be chosen,
or a 2-D disc, as well as a pair of two sources, separated by a specified angle,
and with a specified intensity ratio.
The source surface brightness is displayed by the grey button source,
and by a grey curve.
- How to use the simulator:
- Choose the antenna configuration:
- single dish, pointing at the zenith. The source passes through
the zenith at angle=0.
- 2 or 3 dish adding interferometer. Both antennas point at the zenith, through
across which the source passes.
- 2 or 3 dish adding interferometer. All antennas track the source.
- 2 or 3 dish correlation interferometer. Both antennas point at the zenith, through
across which the source passes.
- 2 or 3 dish correlation interferometer. All antennas track the source.
- Choose the source, and enter all the necessary parameters.
- Click the red button result to show the red curve
of the relative signal that would be measured when the source
passes across the sky. Angle=0 denotes when the centre of the
source passes through the antenna beam centre or the meridian.
- Choose the max.angle so that the main features
are well displayed. If you choose too large a value,
the displayed curve may show kinks or even look weird, because
the curve's fine features are not well represented by the
finite number of points.
- The ordinate - in relative power - can be displayed in linear
or logarithmic manner.
- A click on one of the buttons source, antenna,
result will choose the appropriate
curve to be displayed. With clear one clears the plot
and the choices, so that one may make other choices of what
to display.
- The output button allows to display the numerical data
of the results A and B at the bottom of this page. These are
400 lines of data. Simply grab the text with the mouse, copy and
paste it into a text editor
window for further use and storage as a simple text file. This
may be imported or read by a program of your
choice for further display and analysis.
- Visibility plot: while the data from a single antenna
gives a direct indication of the variation of surface brightness of a source,
interpreting interferometer data is neither direct nor easy:
- The output consists of fringes, whose angular spacing depends on the
separation of the antennas (viz. the baseline), and whose amplitude
contains the information about the angular size of the source.
- From the amplitude of the fringes one determines the visibility:
V = (ymax-ymin)/(ymax+ymin)
This is done by the simulation, and the value is displayed below the plot.
- One measures the visibility for several baselines B.
Since the angular resolution of an interferometer increases with B:
FWHM = 58° / (B/λ)
- which is given on the left hand panel - each observation yields information
of how the source looks like at that particular resolution.
- For the two and three interferometer with tracking the visibilities can
directly be plotted:
- click clear visibilities to bring up the plot and clear it
- enter another value for the 1-2 baseline, hit Enter key or click
add a vis., and another datum is added.
- random 10 adds the results from ten random baselines. This is
useful to get a first idea of the visibility curve.
- scan64 and scan512 computes the visibility curve with the
indicated number of points. such a curve can be displayed in linear
or logarithmic manner.
- note that the computation of a curve may take a bit of time.
- The numerical data can also be outputted by clicking output.
- If one were to try to get a complete coverage of the visibility curve
with two antennas, this would be a tough and tedious job, setting them up
at many baselines and collect observational data!
- Already with three antennas one obtains visibilities from the three
baselines formed by each pair. Thus one observation gives three
points of the visibility curve ...
- Since the projected baselines differ (like B sin(source elevation))
when seen from different sky positions, observing the same object on its
path across the sky yields visibilities from baselines that change with
time.
In this manner, one employs the Earth's rotation to give a more complete
coverage of the visibility curve.
- In a multi-antenna interferometer one may obtain complete coverage of the
visibility (also in 2 dimensions), which permits to reconstruct the brightness
distribution of a source (aperture synthesis).
- Interpretation of results:
- For the convenience of faster computation, this simulation is done in
one dimension: the sources are modelled only along the direction
parallel to the interferometer, and they are assumed to pass over
only in this direction.
- Also in the interest of fast results, the methods are chosen to
give reliable results as long as the parameters are not too extreme ...
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Numerical output (grab data with the mouse)