Accurate radio positions with the Tidbinbilla interferometer
Abstract
The Tidbinbilla interferometer (Batty et al., 1977) is designed specifically to provide accurate radio position measurements of compact radio sources in the Southern Hemisphere with high sensitivity. The interferometer uses the 26-m and 64-m antennas of the Deep Space Network at Tidbinbilla, near Canberra. The two antennas are separated by 200 m on a north-south baseline. By utilizing the existing antennas and the low-noise traveling-wave masers at 2.29 GHz, it has been possible to produce a high-sensitivity instrument with a minimum of capital expenditure. The north-south baseline ensures that a good range of UV coverage is obtained, so that sources lying in the declination range between about -80 and +30 deg may be observed with nearly orthogonal projected baselines of no less than about 1000 lambda. The instrument also provides high-accuracy flux density measurements for compact radio sources.
- Publication:
-
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
- Pub Date:
- 1979
- DOI:
- 10.1017/S1323358000026229
- Bibcode:
- 1979PASA....3..400B
- Keywords:
-
- Radio Astronomy;
- Radio Interferometers;
- Australia;
- Position Indicators;
- Radiant Flux Density;
- Radio Antennas;
- Southern Hemisphere;
- Traveling Wave Masers;
- Ultraviolet Radiation;
- Astronomy