Paper
3 July 2000 Angular resolution, confusion, and dynamic range constraints on the design of next-generation radio telescopes for centimeter wavelengths
Kenneth I. Kellermann
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The next generation of radio telescopes designed to work at centimeter wavelengths may have collecting areas of up to one million square meters, and in principal will be able to reach radio sources as weak as 100 nanojanskys in 12 hours or a few tens of nanojansky in a few hundred hours integration time. However, special care will be needed to achieve the high angular resolution needed to study individual sources and to reduce the effects of confusion and spurious responses below the thermal noise level. This will require array dimensions up to one thousand kilometers to achieve noise limited performance at 1.4 GHz (20 cm) and up to ten thousand kilometers at 300 MHz (1 meter). But, even then, the performance may be limited by the finite extent of the sources and the consequential blending of their images. A scenario is presented for the gradual implementation of a Square Kilometer Array with global dimensions to give submicrojansky sensitivity over a broad range of angular scales and surface brightness.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kenneth I. Kellermann "Angular resolution, confusion, and dynamic range constraints on the design of next-generation radio telescopes for centimeter wavelengths", Proc. SPIE 4015, Radio Telescopes, (3 July 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.390427
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Radio telescopes

Spatial resolution

Optical instrument design

Radio astronomy

Astronomy

Galactic astronomy

Image quality

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