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#51
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Dr J R Stockton writes:
AIUI, Arecibo has a shallowish upwards-facing dish and over it is suspended an aerial cabin in a fixed (?) position. How about (in another valley) having a near-hemispherical upwards-facing dish with an aerial assembly on motorised cables so that it could routinely be moved wherever required in the bowl, so steering the beam Arecibo has you beat on this - the reciever can be moved to steer up to 20 degrees from straight up. It can track an object for up to two hours. They use motor drives on a suspended stationary platform. over the entire upwards hemisphere? There would of course be a loss of effective area away from the vertical; but ISTM that, while not too near the horizon, the loss would not be great. The aerials would be dockable at the centre of the dish, for access. The big problem is not collecting area, but noise. If you go off center, the feed illuminates the (warm) ground, which is terrible for noise. Arecibo has a 15 meter fence around it to minimize it, but if you try to get far from the zenith it's a still worse. For access, Arecibo has a catwalk and cable car. Since the suspended part is quite heavy (many 10s of tons, at least) a person is not much extra. The dish could be actively shaped to be a paraboloid of appropriate axis orientation, or some equivalent of a correcting lens could perhaps be used. Arecibo beat you to this, too. It now has a 3 mirror system that focuses correctly with a spherical primary. Or the assembly on the cables could itself be a smaller mirror, shaped to redirect the waves onto a hut-with-aerials at the centre of the bowl (Tip : beware flash floods!). Arecibo has 2 mirrors in the suspended sphere, and the focal point is there too. Lou Scheffer |
#52
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Dr J R Stockton wrote:
AIUI, Arecibo has a shallowish upwards-facing dish and over it is suspended an aerial cabin in a fixed (?) position. Nope, it's moveable. In brief. Arecibo is a spherical reflector that uses a moveable line feed (as opposed to the point feed used with parabolic reflectors) to steer the direction of the beam. Why a line feed? Because unlike a parabolic reflector which focuses an incoming plane wave to a point, a spherical reflector focuses an incoming plane wave to a line. Thus, one needs to use a distributed antenna rather than a point antenna as the feed. Why a spherical reflector? By physically moving the line feed, one can steer the beam without steering or deforming the reflector. This isn't possible with a parabolic reflector. How far can one steer the beam? Not too much. The usual limitation in any reflector antenna used to receive signals from space is spillover which allows the feed to see signals from the warm ground rather than just cold space. The dish could be actively shaped to be a paraboloid of appropriate axis orientation, or some equivalent of a correcting lens could perhaps be used. Easier said than done, I fear. That's why Arecibo ended up in its current configuration. Or phase-shifting might be employed between the aerial assembly and the rest of the electronics. You're confusing the role of the primary and secondary. Steering the beam from the primary (feed) can distort the antenna pattern of the secondary (reflector), but it won't steer the antenna pattern. The only way to steer the beam is to impart a phase shift across the aperture of the secondary. -- Dave Michelson |
#53
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In article id,
Dr J R Stockton wrote: Valleys with vaguely suitable shapes, you can find. The big problem is that an Arecibo-type dish is not very steerable. It can only look at things in a limited range of celestial latitudes, and even if your target is in that strip of sky, you only get one short look each day... AIUI, Arecibo has a shallowish upwards-facing dish and over it is suspended an aerial cabin in a fixed (?) position... How about (in another valley) having a near-hemispherical upwards-facing dish with an aerial assembly on motorised cables so that it could routinely be moved wherever required in the bowl, so steering the beam over the entire upwards hemisphere? As others have already noted, this *is* done at Arecibo (or was; I haven't kept track of the recent changes). In practice, it doesn't give you anywhere near a full hemisphere of steering; instead of 180deg, the useful steering range is 20-30deg (if I'm remembering correctly). There is only so much you can do to steer a fixed dish by playing games with the feed. You might be able to do a bit better if you worked really hard at it, but do note that Arecibo's limited steering range is a big handicap to it, and so some smart people have put considerable thought into widening that range, with very limited results. -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
#55
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Dave Michelson wrote:
Dr J R Stockton wrote: AIUI, Arecibo has a shallowish upwards-facing dish and over it is suspended an aerial cabin in a fixed (?) position. Nope, it's moveable. In brief. Arecibo is a spherical reflector that uses a moveable line feed (as opposed to the point feed used with parabolic reflectors) to steer the direction of the beam. Why a line feed? Because unlike a parabolic reflector which focuses an incoming plane wave to a point, a spherical reflector focuses an incoming plane wave to a line. Thus, one needs to use a distributed antenna rather than a point antenna as the feed. This was true for a number of years, but they changed (in about 1998) to a 3 mirror system that focuses to a point. The secondary and tertiary mirrors are in the dome that hangs where the line feeds were (and I think some line feeds may still be in use) See: http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases...o/project.html Lou Scheffer |
#56
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In article ,
Craig Fink wrote: Well, everything that is in Orbit around the Earth with a greater inclination than the latitude of Arecibo would be with the narrow range that the big dish has. At some point. Tracking known stuff when the time is right, and just scanning in between, eventually would would have them all. Yes, but the subject under discussion was deep-space tracking and communication, where it's a grave handicap to have such a limited field of view and such limited contact windows. -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
#57
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wrote:
This was true for a number of years, but they changed (in about 1998) to a 3 mirror system that focuses to a point. The secondary and tertiary mirrors are in the dome that hangs where the line feeds were (and I think some line feeds may still be in use) See: http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases...o/project.html Thanks for the link. Very much appreciated! -- Dave Michelson |
#58
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Jim Kingdon wrote:
A friend visited Greenbank national observatory recently. All but one dish is mothballed stored pointing straight up. Seems no one wants to buy user time on any but the largest dish there. Well, the Howard E. Tatel telescope, for example, is 26 meter. That's pretty small by Deep Space Network standards. I couldn't give numbers, but this isn't the only unused radio telescope in this size range (I remember one in Colorado that people wanted to use for an amateur Mars missions for example). There are two. They are about a mile from where I am sitting right now. They need a bit of refurbishing to get back into good condition. |
#59
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Henry Spencer wrote:
DSN already routinely combines signals from several dishes, and there is interest in the idea of building large arrays of small dishes rather than a few big ones -- sort of a halfway step, since the small dishes would still be mechanically steered -- but that's still an experimental idea. Again, not what you'd build today. Actually, this one is very close. If a 70 meter dish failed today, I'd bet they'd do it. A new 70 meter class dish costs $100M, and an array of smaller dishes has lots of advantages. It can be quite a bit cheaper, depending on the details. It can be split to point at many targets, it has fewer points of failure, it can be maintained a little at a time, the size can be increased in smaller increments, it can be spread out geographically to add weather and disaster diversity, and so on.... The days of big dishes are numbered. Lou Scheffer |
#60
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wrote:
Actually, this one is very close. If a 70 meter dish failed today, I'd bet they'd do it. A new 70 meter class dish costs $100M, and an array of smaller dishes has lots of advantages. It can be quite a bit cheaper, depending on the details. It can be split to point at many targets, it has fewer points of failure, it can be maintained a little at a time, the size can be increased in smaller increments, it can be spread out geographically to add weather and disaster diversity, and so on.... The days of big dishes are numbered. I agree with all of the above, but am curious about the cost. It would take at least eight or ten 25-metre dishes to equal the collecting area of a single 70-metre dish. (25-metres being a fairly standard diameter reflector for use in radio astronomy arrays :-) The pattern of a widely spaced array of large antennas would be a lot more complicated than that of a single large antenna. In particular, the grating lobes would be very noticeable. (Almost all conventional arrays are closely spaced arrays of small antennas.) Having said, that, this has been done before with the VLA and suitable use of feedback control and RF-over-fibre links would solve lots of immediate problems. The good news, of course, is that much technical experience and expertise has developed over the past decade (in particular) from work on multi-antenna radio astronomy projects ranging from the VLA to the SKA (Square Kilometre Array). (Yes, there are significance differences between aperture synthesis and conventional arrays, but by and large the people involved could likely handle both or either as required.) -- Dave Michelson |
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