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On Jun 19, 11:20*am, Robert Clark wrote:
On Jun 16, 6:57 pm, Robert Clark wrote: From: (Robert Clark) Date: 23 May 2001 11:15:06 -0700 Subject: Will amateur radio astronomers be the first to directly detect extrasolar planets? Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.space, rec.radio.amateur.antenna, sci.astro, sci.astro.seti, sci.space.policyhttp://groups.google.com/group/sci.astro.seti/browse_frm/thread/c0018... *The long wavelengths should make the requirements for accurate distance information and timing synchrony between the separate detectors easy to manage even for amateur systems. Not easy, not for the precision required. You need not only precise time (straightforward), but also precise location (not so straightforward) You're interested in roughly 20MHz, as I recall. Wavelength of 15 meters. In time, about 45 nanoseconds. Let's start with a real relaxed requirement, comparable to the mirror flatness for a telescope of lambda/14. That means a time knowledge of about 3 ns and a position knowledge of 1 meter, in absolute terms. Typical GPS receivers that have a 1pps output are good to about 20-30 nanoseconds. Using that to discipline a quartz oscillator, you can do a bit better, but it's non trivial to get to the 1-2 ns range. Remember, you're also planning on integrating over time, so you have to hold that tolerance for a long time. It would be difficult to determine your position to an absolute accuracy of 1 meter, much less the phase center of the antenna (which will change as a function of the angle of incidence, quite substantially, unless you're putting those dipoles up 100s of feet in the air. Using this method might make the detection achievable even if the power or transmitting antenna size requirements are not practical for a low cost, low weight lander *on the Moon for an individual detector on Earth. *The recent achievement of real-time very long baseline interferometry should make it possible to integrate these separate detector signals in real-time as well: snip You need to go beyond looking at press releases from radio astronomers. *However, instead of using the satellite TV dishes, we could use individual dipole antennas attached to each house. You would need to communicate high data rates for the signals detected so you would need broadband internet access for this. *These dipole antennas as per the Radio JOVE project are just simple vertical wires so could be attached to the house when the installer is connecting the wiring for the broadband. Possibly you could use the same external wiring as for the broadband but that might cause interference with the internet signals. Radio Jove uses a pair of horizontal dipoles connected together to create a single narrower lobe pointing up. *As shown on the Radio JOVE page the receivers for these dipole antennas are quite simple so would contribute minimally to the cost of installation. Who's paying, and how minimal? I don't think so. You do need accurate positional determination and timing synchrony for each receiving system to do the very long baseline interferometry, but at these decametric wavelengths this would be easy to do with GPS receivers carried by the installers. No they can't. You need position accuracy of sub-1 meter accuracy, and that isn't achievable by simple handheld devices, like your Garmin E-trex, etc. A surveyor using a survey GPS system can get there, although absolute position (relative to, say, the center of the earth, or some standard datum) to 1 meter would be very challenging. There's also the not so little problem of tidal bulge. Your position changes in absolute (relative to a stellar reference) terms several tens of cm. On top of that, tectonic plate movement is on the order of several cm/year, which is in the same general ballpark as your accuracy requirement. To do the kind of large area combining you're contemplating requires geodetic quality surveying or some form of in-situ calibration using known sources (which the folks doing LOFAR and SKA have thought about). When DSN does accurate interferometric measurements of deep space probes (a process called Delta DOR) they use a "common view" quasar as a timing reference, because the Hydrogen maser normally used for VLBI kinds of things isn't good enough. Over time you could keep the systems in synchrony by timing stamps accessed over the internet. NTP over the internet is only good to tens of milliseconds. You need nanosecond precision. *New broadband subscribers would automatically get the dipole antennas. At the rate of increase of broadband subscribers, it would only take 3 months to reach 10 million separate dipoles. If each installer when setting up a new system, also retrofitted an another existing broadband system, then you could reach the full coverage of all the broadband subscribers dipoles in 6 years. Let's see, leaving aside the surveying and time synchronization problems, in economic terms this is a non-starter. Say it costs $100 for each "station"... that's a billion dollars for your 10 million stations. And $100 is a very, very low cost estimate, because installer time isn't free (probably about $25/hr with all benefits, insurance, equipment, added in). BTW, if you really want to do something like this, think in terms of an addon to a cell site. They already have to have nanosecond precision timing and surveys in order to do E-911 position trilateration. *The number of world-wide broadband subscribers will be 500 million by 2010. At current growth rates it would be 900 million within the 6 years it took to equip each broadband subscriber system with one of the antenna dipoles. This is nearly two orders of magnitude better sensitivity than a 10 million dipole system. You could detect out to 100 light-years, opening up many more stars to the possibility of detection. I think the 100 billion dollars could be better spent in other ways, if looking for planets is your goal. Check out Terrestrial Planet Finder (TPF) for one approach. * * * Bob Clark |
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