Introduction to Radio Astronomy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

Introduction to Radio Astronomy

Description:

... of electricity and magnetism (Maxwell's equations) to derive the electromagnetic ... Greenbank (WV) 100-m telescope in. has a resolution of 7 arc-minutes. 37 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:237
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: davidm74
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introduction to Radio Astronomy


1
Introduction to Radio Astronomy
  • Updated February 2009

2
The Visible Sky, Sagittarius Region
3
The Radio Sky
4
(No Transcript)
5
  • Optical and Radio can be done from the ground!

6
Outline
  • The Discovery of Radio Waves
  • Maxwell, Hertz and Marconi
  • The Birth of Radio Astronomy
  • Jansky and Reber
  • Tools of Radio Astronomy
  • What we use to detect radio
  • Sources of Radio Emission
  • Everything!

7
James Clerk Maxwell
  • Tied together theories of electricity and
    magnetism (Maxwells equations) to derive the
    electromagnetic theory of light

8
  • Electric and magnetic fields oscillate together
    with the same frequency and period
  • Electromagnetic waves do not require a medium!
  • The velocity and wavelength spectrum are defined
  • c ?f

9
Heinrich Hertz
  • Constructed a circuit to induce electric and
    magnetic field oscillations. This circuit
    transmitted electromagnetic waves to a nearby
    capacitive loop receiver

Heinrich Hertz's first transmitter, 1886
10
Karl Guthe JanskyFounder of Radio Astronomy
  • Hired by Bell Labs in the late 1920s, Janskys
    mission was to find sources of radio interference

11
  • Jansky constructed a directional 20.5 MHz antenna
    on a turntable to locate radio noise source
    positions
  • Sources of noise
  • Nearby storms
  • Distant storms
  • A faint hiss that returned every 23 hours 56
    minutes

12
In 1933, Jansky identified this source of noise
as the center of our galaxy, in Sagittarius
13
Grote ReberRadio Astronomy Pioneer
  • After Janskys project ended, Bell Labs was not
    interested in studying radio astronomy
  • Reber continued Janskys original work, by
    constructing his own radio telescope in 1937
  • Provided the first maps of the radio sky at
    160 and 480 MHz

14
Rebers 31.4 ft parabolic reflector
15
Synchrotron or Non-thermal
Rebers contour maps of the Milky Way, at 160
and 480 MHz
16
(No Transcript)
17
Colors of light we cant see
  • Ionizing Radiation
  • UV
  • X-Rays
  • Gamma Rays
  • Non-Ionizing Radiation
  • IR
  • Microwave
  • Radio

18
Multi-wavelength Astronomy
19
Astronomy expands to the entire spectrum.
20
FCC allotment of Radio Spectrum
21
Tools of Radio Astronomy
  • Your car radio is an example of a simple antenna
    and receiver
  • Radio waves actually cause free electrons in
    metals to oscillate!
  • Radio receivers amplify these oscillations, so,
    radio telescopes measure the voltage on the sky

22
Formation of Radio Waves
  • Thermal Radiation
  • Synchrotron Radiation
  • Relativistic e- in magnetic fields
  • Bremstrahlung
  • Breaking Radiation e- /ion collisions
  • Maser
  • Microwave Laser e- oscillations in molecular
    clouds
  • Atomic Transitions (emission spectra)
  • Hydrogen e- spin flip

23
Formation of 21cm Radio waves(1420 MHz)
24
Reception of Radio Waves
  • Radio waves cause oscillation of free e- in
    metals
  • Dish reflector antennas localize the source and
    exclude background noise
  • Radio signal intensity is measured as voltage

25
Telescopes for visible light
26
Radio Telescope
receiver
parabolic reflector
control room
The 140 Foot Telescope Green Bank, WV
27
Reception of Radio Waves
28
Reception of Radio Waves
29
Receiver Feed Horn
Example signal path of a radio telescope
Amplifier
Mixer
Antenna Control
Spectrometer
Control Computer
30
  • Spectrometer Output
  • Spectrum brightness vs. radio frequency
  • Continuum total brightness over all frequencies

31
  • Radio waves are VERY weak!
  • Radio brightness measured in units of Janskys
  • 1 Jansky (Jy) 10-26 W/m2/Hz
  • Typical sources
  • Sun 10,000s of Jy
  • Brightest Supernova Remnant 1000s of Jy
  • Active Galactic Nuclei 10-100 Jy

32
The Ideal Radio Telescope
  • Directional antennae, such as those with
    reflectors, isolate the radio power from single
    sources to reduce confusing radiation from others
  • Low temperature receivers are more sensitive
  • Large collecting areas increase gain and
    resolution
  • Resolution roughly 57.3 ?/D degrees (?
    observing wavelength, D diameter of aperture)

33
  • Optical telescopes have an advantage on radio
    telescopes in angular resolution
  • A one meter optical telescope has a resolution of
    0.1 seconds of arc.
  • Since radio telescopes cannot be built large
    enough to match optical resolution, they can be
    combined as an interferometer to emulate a large
    single dish

34
  • At 21-cm wavelengths, PARIs 26-m and Smiley (4.6
    m) have resolutions of 0.5 and 2.5 degrees
    respectively

35
12 Meter
36
Greenbank (WV) 100-m telescope in has a
resolution of 7 arc-minutes
37
300-m telescope in Arecibo, Puerto Rico
(resolution 2.4 arcminutes)
38
Very Large Array, resolution 1.4 arc seconds
39
10 Antennas of the Very Long Baseline Array
(resolution 5 milli-arcseconds)
40
Time for Radio Astronomy Observing
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com