A Novel Technique for Wide-Field Polarimetry with a Radio Telescope Array

  • McConnell D
  • Carretti E
  • Subrahmanyan R
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Abstract

We report the use of the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) to conduct polarimetric observations of the sky at 5 GHz. The ATCA is normally operated as an interferometer array, but these observations were conducted in a split-array mode in which the antenna elements were used as single dishes with their beams staggered to simultaneously cover a wide area of sky with a resolution of 10′. The linearly polarized sky radiation was fully characterized from measurements, made over a range of parallactic angles, of the cross-correlated signals from the orthogonal linear feeds. We describe the technique and present a polarimetric image of the Vela supernova remnant made as a test of the method. The development of the technique was motivated by the need for wide-field imaging of the foreground contamination of the polarized component of the cosmic microwave background signal. © 2006. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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McConnell, D., Carretti, E., & Subrahmanyan, R. (2006). A Novel Technique for Wide-Field Polarimetry with a Radio Telescope Array. The Astronomical Journal, 131(1), 648–653. https://doi.org/10.1086/498061

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