RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope

South Africa is currently building MeerKAT, a 64 dish radio telescope array, as a pre-cursor for the proposed Square Kilometre Array (SKA). Both telescopes will be located at a remote site in the Karoo with a low level of Radio Frequency Interference (RFI). It is important to maintain a low level of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schollar, Christopher
Other Authors: Blyth, Sarah-Louise
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17396
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-173962020-10-06T05:11:14Z RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope Schollar, Christopher Blyth, Sarah-Louise Kuttel, Michelle Mary Schroeder, Anja Computer Science South Africa is currently building MeerKAT, a 64 dish radio telescope array, as a pre-cursor for the proposed Square Kilometre Array (SKA). Both telescopes will be located at a remote site in the Karoo with a low level of Radio Frequency Interference (RFI). It is important to maintain a low level of RFI to ensure that MeerKAT has an unobstructed view of the universe across its bandwidth. The only way to effectively manage the environment is with a record of RFI around the telescope. The RFI management team on the MeerKAT site has multiple tools for monitoring RFI. There is a 7 dish radio telescope array called KAT7 which is used for bi-weekly RFI scans on the horizon. The team has two RFI trailers which provide a mobile spectrum and transient measurement system. They also have commercial handheld spectrum analysers. Most of these tools are only used sporadically during RFI measurement campaigns. None of the tools provided a continuous record of the environment and none of them perform automatic RFI detection. Here we design and implement an automatic, continuous RFI monitoring solution for MeerKAT. The monitor consists of an auxiliary antenna on site which continuously captures and stores radio spectra. The statistics of the spectra describe the radio frequency environment and identify potential RFI sources. All of the stored RFI data is accessible over the web. Users can view the data using interactive visualisations or download the raw data. The monitor thus provides a continuous record of the RF environment, automatically detects RFI and makes this information easily accessible. This RFI monitor functioned successfully for over a year with minimal human intervention. The monitor assisted RFI management on site during RFI campaigns. The data has proved to be accurate, the RFI detection algorithm shown to be effective and the web visualisations have been tested by MeerKAT engineers and astronomers and proven to be useful. The monitor represents a clear improvement over previous monitoring solutions used by MeerKAT and is an effective site management tool. 2016-02-29T13:23:59Z 2016-02-29T13:23:59Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17396 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Computer Science
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Computer Science
spellingShingle Computer Science
Schollar, Christopher
RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope
description South Africa is currently building MeerKAT, a 64 dish radio telescope array, as a pre-cursor for the proposed Square Kilometre Array (SKA). Both telescopes will be located at a remote site in the Karoo with a low level of Radio Frequency Interference (RFI). It is important to maintain a low level of RFI to ensure that MeerKAT has an unobstructed view of the universe across its bandwidth. The only way to effectively manage the environment is with a record of RFI around the telescope. The RFI management team on the MeerKAT site has multiple tools for monitoring RFI. There is a 7 dish radio telescope array called KAT7 which is used for bi-weekly RFI scans on the horizon. The team has two RFI trailers which provide a mobile spectrum and transient measurement system. They also have commercial handheld spectrum analysers. Most of these tools are only used sporadically during RFI measurement campaigns. None of the tools provided a continuous record of the environment and none of them perform automatic RFI detection. Here we design and implement an automatic, continuous RFI monitoring solution for MeerKAT. The monitor consists of an auxiliary antenna on site which continuously captures and stores radio spectra. The statistics of the spectra describe the radio frequency environment and identify potential RFI sources. All of the stored RFI data is accessible over the web. Users can view the data using interactive visualisations or download the raw data. The monitor thus provides a continuous record of the RF environment, automatically detects RFI and makes this information easily accessible. This RFI monitor functioned successfully for over a year with minimal human intervention. The monitor assisted RFI management on site during RFI campaigns. The data has proved to be accurate, the RFI detection algorithm shown to be effective and the web visualisations have been tested by MeerKAT engineers and astronomers and proven to be useful. The monitor represents a clear improvement over previous monitoring solutions used by MeerKAT and is an effective site management tool.
author2 Blyth, Sarah-Louise
author_facet Blyth, Sarah-Louise
Schollar, Christopher
author Schollar, Christopher
author_sort Schollar, Christopher
title RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope
title_short RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope
title_full RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope
title_fullStr RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope
title_full_unstemmed RFI monitoring for the MeerKAT Radio Telescope
title_sort rfi monitoring for the meerkat radio telescope
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17396
work_keys_str_mv AT schollarchristopher rfimonitoringforthemeerkatradiotelescope
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