Radio emission from the Sun at 843 MHz |
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Authors: | A. Gray M. I. Large D. Campbell-Wilson L. Cram |
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Affiliation: | (1) School of Physics, University of Sydney, 2006, NSW, Australia |
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Abstract: | The Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope (MOST) has recently been modified to permit observations of the Sun. With a collecting area of 18000 m2, MOST makes high-sensitivity measurements in right-hand circular polarisation over a 3 MHz bandwidth at 843 MHz. The maximum baseline of the multi-element interferometer is 1600 m, so that one-dimensional spatial resolution as fine as 32 arc sec is available. A resistor array produces simultaneously a set of 64 beams separated by 22 arc sec, which may be offset electronically to cover the entire Sun in a few seconds. Observations may be made with a beam shape corresponding to either a multiplying or an adding interferometer. By exploiting the technique of Earth-rotation synthesis the telescope may be used to make two-dimensional maps of the Sun at the time of the austral solstice with a synthesized beamwidth of 43 × 110 arc sec. This paper describes the instrument and the procedures used to make various types of solar observations, and exhibits some of the first data collected. |
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