Manx Arrays: Perfect Non-Redundant Interferometric Geometries
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28321Date
2022-09-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Interferometry applications (e.g., radio astronomy) often wish to optimize the placement of
the interferometric elements. One such optimal criterion is a uniform distribution of non-redundant element
spacings (in both distance and position angle). While large systems, with many elements, can rely on saturating
the sample space, and disregard “wasted” sampling, small arrays with only a few elements are more critical,
where a single element can represent a significant fraction of the overall cost. This paper defines a “perfect
array” as a mathematical construct having uniform and complete element spacings within a circle of radius
equal to the maximum element spacing. Additionally, the largest perfect non-redundant array, comprising six
elements, is presented. The geometry is described, along with the properties of the layout and situations where
it would be of significant benefit to array application and non-redundant masking designs.
Publisher
WileyCitation
McKay, Grydeland, Gustavsson. Manx Arrays: Perfect Non-Redundant Interferometric Geometries. Radio Science. 2022;57(9)Metadata
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