CARMA, and the CARMA WVR effort

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CARMA, and the CARMA CARMA, and the CARMA WVR effort WVR effort Alberto Bolatto Alberto Bolatto Associate Research Astronomer Associate Research Astronomer U.C. Berkeley Astronomy U.C. Berkeley Astronomy Radio Astronomy Lab Radio Astronomy Lab Dick Plambeck (UCB/RAL), Dave Woody (Caltech), Leslie Looney, Yu-Shao Shiao (UI), Douglas Bock (CARMA) WVR workshop WVR workshop Wettzell 2006 Wettzell 2006

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WVR workshop Wettzell 2006. CARMA, and the CARMA WVR effort. Alberto Bolatto Associate Research Astronomer U.C. Berkeley Astronomy Radio Astronomy Lab. Dick Plambeck (UCB/RAL), Dave Woody (Caltech), Leslie Looney, Yu-Shao Shiao (UI), Douglas Bock (CARMA). Outline. What is CARMA? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of CARMA, and the CARMA WVR effort

Page 1: CARMA, and the CARMA WVR effort

CARMA, and the CARMA CARMA, and the CARMA WVR effortWVR effort

Alberto BolattoAlberto BolattoAssociate Research AstronomerAssociate Research Astronomer

U.C. Berkeley AstronomyU.C. Berkeley AstronomyRadio Astronomy LabRadio Astronomy Lab

Dick Plambeck (UCB/RAL), Dave Woody (Caltech), Leslie Looney, Yu-Shao Shiao (UI),

Douglas Bock (CARMA)

WVR workshop WVR workshop Wettzell 2006Wettzell 2006

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Outline

• What is CARMA?

• The OVRO experience

• The RAL correlation radiometer

• What next?

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+ UChicago SZA 8 3.5-m antennas

Berkeley-Illinois-Maryland array

10 6.1-m diameter antennas

Caltech array 6 10.4-m antennas

CEDAR FLAT

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Cedar Flat – elevation 2200m

June 2004August 2005

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21 Jul 2004 – lifting off the first reflector

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panel adjustmentsurface error determined from holography

before adjustment: 127 μm rms

→ 75% loss at 225 GHz

after adjustment: 28 μm rms

→ 7% loss at 225 GHz

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all antennas assembled10 Aug 2005

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Comparison with other arrays

CARMA

+ SZASMA IRAM ALMA

elevation 2200 m 4200 2500 5000

antennas 23 8 6 50+

baselines 253 28 15 1225+

diameter 10, 6, 3.5 6 15 12, 7

area 850 m2 226 1060 5600+

max baseline

1900 m 500 m 400 m 14 km

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E, D configurations

Now

1.6 km

baselines 8–150 m

1mm beam: 2”

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E, D, C configurations

for Winter 2005

1.6 km

baselines 8–350 m

1mm beam: 0.8”

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E, D, C, B, B+ configurations

for Winter 2006

1.6 km

baselines 8–1700 m

1mm beam: 0.2”

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E, D, C, B, A configurations

for Winter 2008

1.6 km

baselines 8–1900 m

1mm beam: 0.13”

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225 GHz zenith opacity

% tau mm H2O

SSB Tsys

25 <.12 <1.8 <290

50 <.16 <2.4 <350

75 <.28 <4.3 <520

Tsys computed for 1.5 airmasses, Trcvr(DSB) = 45 K

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OVRO WVR

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Sample phase improvement

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It can work, but…

• Can it work reliably?

• It’s easy to improve very bad tracks, but good tracks can be worsen

• Only works for ~40% of the dataY.-S. Shiao et al., SPIE, (2006)

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Correlation WVR at 22 GHz

• Correlation receiver: less sensitive to amplifier gain variations, no moving parts, built-in absolute calibration. Fast control of temperature of reference for nulling: ultimate stability.

• Weak points: complexity, sensitive to spurious correlations

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Expected performance

• Measured amplifier performance based on Hittite commercial HMC 281 GaAs mmic ($40):

Tnoise ~55 K, G ~23 dB, BP ~16-36 GHz • Expect Tsys ~ 140 K, or RMS ~5 mK in 1s in 1 GHz

hot spill~3% (9 K), input w.g. loss~0.5 dB (32 K), hybrid+w.g./coax loss~0.3 dB (4 K), 2nd amp stage~5-10 K

• Assuming canonical ~4.5 mm/K @ 22.2 GHz expect path RMS ~20 mm in 1s

• Performance will be degraded by control of load temperature, thermometry, spectral baseline removal, etc, but there is a safe margin /20 goal is ~60 mm

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Block diagram

x2

CARMA X-band

CTL

CANbus uP + DAQ

22 GHz optics

180 hybrid/magic T

BIMA dewar

HMC 281 cryo amps

DITOM D3I1826DUAL HMC281

NARDA 4017C-10

MARKI M1R-0726L

18-26 GHz

ASTRONOMY IF

MCL SLP-550

NARDA 4317B-2D0612LA

9-13.5 GHz YIG OSC.

DETECTOR

4-q multiplier

180° PHASE SWITCH

WR42 th. gap + window

12 K stage

40 K stage

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The ReceiverK band

cryo amp (x4)

Controled temp. load

Magic-tee

hybrid

Thermal clamp to 12

K stage

Input (to

horn)

Input (to

horn)

K band cryo amp

(x4)

Thermal clamp to 12

K stageControled temp. load

Magic-tee

hybrid

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The Controlled Temperature Load

Cernox sensor chip on top of inverted 50 Ω

alumina resistor

10 mil 50 Ω quartz μstrip

Heater biasing

wire

• Load + sensor mass is 3 mg: fast temperature response

• Once mounted, sensors are calibrated against standards

•S11~-20 dB

Brass pedestal

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The Amplifiers

HittiteHMC 281

12 amps put together by Dusty Madison, a freshman summer

student who learned to assemble and wirebond them

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The Dewar “Insert”

• Minimum impact on existing BIMA dewar

• No internal screws/electrical connections: just plugs in

• Special 2-port test dewar designed and fabricated

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Other HardwareLO/

downconverter

LO/downconverter

IF/MultiplierIF/Multiplier

MicrocontrollerMicrocontroller Signal conditioning

Signal conditioning

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The Complete SystemWVR

dewar “inserts”

LO chain and downconvert

er

IF chain, AGC,

multiplier, phase

switching, and filters

Signal conditionin

g and control

electronics

XAC uP, ADC, DAC,

and CANbus

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Nice idea, but it has proven difficult to make it work

• Tests looking into heated cryogenic waveguide load in 2nd dewar

• Non flat passband– Slope is caused by

imperfect hybrid– Central feature is

from CTL wg adaptor

– Edges not quite understood

– A few K of “extra” correlation, probably reflections in hybrid

Status May 2005Status May 2005

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Nice idea, but it has proven difficult to make it work

• Spurious correlation due to internal coherent reflections– Could be mitigated

with input isolators

• Even without moving parts, calibration is not repeatable enough– Difficult to attain the

mK calibrability goal

• Further work?

Status May 2005Status May 2005

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What next?• Revert to basics – Simple is beautiful• Implement a Dicke-switch radiometer

– Room temperature: use noise diode– Cryogenic: use controlled temperature load

LOCTL

DETe.g. AD8309

Dicke-WVR assembly using CTL

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Conclusions• Phase correction schemes improve correlation

for a fraction of the tracks, but not all the time. Atmosphere or engineering?

• Nulling correlation radiometers are nice in theory, very difficult in practice. Large part count and complexity makes them unattractive for (university based) interferometers.

• Dickey-switch type schemes are considerably simpler, and more attractive if stability of 1:10,000 can be attained. Partial successes at PdBI, VLA, and ALMA/SMA suggest they are viable.