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Published byCecily Lyons Modified over 6 years ago
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An FP5 RTD programme Participants: University of Manchester: UK
CONTRACT VALUE: € 1.5 Million Duration: 36 months 1Nov 2001 31Oct 2004 Participants: University of Manchester: UK (Coordinator: P. Wilkinson) Istituto di Radioastronomia: ITALY (CNR) Stichting ASTRON: NETHERLANDS Nicholas Copernicus University Torun: POLAND CSIRO/Australia Telescope National Facility: AUSTRALIA
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Focal-plane Arrays for Radio Astronomy (thanks to I. Browne) Design Access and Yield
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The FARADAY Drivers: Radio astronomy receivers are constructed out of discrete components expensive in manpower radio telescopes often only equipped with one/two receivers at a given frequency . If receivers can be fabricated more cheaply (via integration) multiple-beam (array) systems should become the norm existing telescopes can collect data much more quickly if these data can be easily analysed a wider range of astronomers can gain access to observing time on the leading facilities.
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At the heart of FARADAY is the development of various complex monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs) in InP and GaAs Sub-project 1: Horn arrays for continuum surveys at ~30 GHz. Main deliverable: 8-horn prototype continuum receiver array Sub-project 2: Horn arrays for spectroscopy in the band GHz Main deliverable: 5-horn prototype heterodyne receiver array
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A 100 beam horn array at the focus of the Torun 32m telescope
A 100 beam horn array at the focus of the Torun 32m telescope (one medium-term goal, via national funding) A beam spectroscopic horn array on the 64m Sardinia telescope is another medium-term goal
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Sub-project 3: Actively-phased arrays at 2-5 GHz for use at the
focus of large radio telescopes Multiple beams can be synthesised and steered electronically. The long-term aims are: to improve the efficiency of individual telescopes (by correcting surface errors) to open up the widest possible field-of-view (by sampling the field in the entire focal volume). The FARADAY deliverables are a 16-element 2-beam prototype array to work in the frequency range 2.5 to 5 GHz.
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Sub-project 4: Development of flexible software tools for the acquisition and analysis of data from continuum horn arrays Using AIPS++: ideally all single-dish observing software “unified” data products designed for archiving and Virtual Observatories Status of FARADAY: all 4 projects well underway End-of-first-year meeting: November at CSIRO/ATNF
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FARADAY deliverables will both:
- enhance the existing European infrastructure - contribute to the next generation of international projects: The continuum source surveys: Interpretation of ESA Planck Surveyor data; target and calibration sources for ALMA The spectroscopic surveys: census of the galactic environment complementing data from ALMA etc. The phased array R&D is a step in Europe's R&D for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
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Lesson 1) Don’t under estimate management overheads!
Pre-contract negotiations with Commission Consortium Agreement (with potential commercial implications) Intellectual Property issues (with potential commercial implications) Non-disclosure Agreements (with potential commercial implications) Additional Agreements (between the partners) Working with a self-financing partner (Australia) Lesson 2) We need to be able to source state-of-the-art microwave components (InP) from within Europe (USA end-use restrictions)
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WHERE NEXT?: Joint Research Projects within an I3
Development of (cooled/HTSC) phased arrays for operation at deci- and centimetric wavelengths at the foci of radio telescopes. - potential commercial applications Further development of large horn array receivers for mm (and sub-mm?) wavelengths (i.e. shorter than FARADAY) Continued software development for multiple-beam operations with single telescopes.
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