Paper
3 July 2000 OCRA: a one-centimeter receiver array
Ian W.A. Browne, Shude Mao, Peter N. Wilkinson, Andrej J. Kus, Andrzej Marecki, Mark Birkinshaw
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The One Centimeter Receiver Array (OCRA) will be an approximately 100-element close-packed horn array mounted at the secondary focus of a large paraboloidal radio telescope. With its large number of simultaneous beams OCRA will be able to carry out unbiased surveys of the radio sky at sensitivity levels which are currently impractical; it therefore offers the potential for making new astronomical discoveries. OCRA will use conventional waveguide horns and the radio frequency technology will be based on that being developed for the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) on the Planck Surveyor satellite. The principal design problems to overcome are fluctuations in the atmospheric transmission during the observations and the intrinsic 1/f noise in the wide-band (approximately 10 GHz) receivers. The baseline design concept involves approximately 50 paris of horns with each pair connected to an independent correlation receiver. An alternative concept involves approximately 100 total power receivers with moving tertiary mirror to modulate their beam patterns on the sky at a rate faster than either the fluctuations in the atmosphere or the 1/f noise. The relative advantages and disadvantages of these different approaches are under investigation.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ian W.A. Browne, Shude Mao, Peter N. Wilkinson, Andrej J. Kus, Andrzej Marecki, and Mark Birkinshaw "OCRA: a one-centimeter receiver array", Proc. SPIE 4015, Radio Telescopes, (3 July 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.390424
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Cited by 22 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Receivers

Telescopes

Astronomy

Radio telescopes

Radiometry

Space telescopes

X-rays

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