LBCS: The LOFAR Long-Baseline Calibrator Survey
| Authors |
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|---|---|
| Publication date | 11-2016 |
| Journal | Astronomy & Astrophysics |
| Article number | A86 |
| Volume | Issue number | 595 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
We outline the LOFAR Long-Baseline Calibrator Survey (LBCS), whose aim
is to identify sources suitable for calibrating the highest-resolution
observations made with the International LOFAR Telescope, which include
baselines >1000 km. Suitable sources must contain significant
correlated flux density (≳ 50 - 100 mJy) at frequencies around
110-190 MHz on scales of a few hundred milliarcseconds. At least for the
200-300-km international baselines, we find around 1 suitable calibrator
source per square degree over a large part of the northern sky, in
agreement with previous work. This should allow a randomly selected
target to be successfully phase calibrated on the international
baselines in over 50% of cases. Products of the survey include
calibrator source lists and fringe-rate and delay maps of wide areas -
typically a few degrees - around each source. The density of sources
with significant correlated flux declines noticeably with baseline
length over the range 200-600 km, with good calibrators on the longest
baselines appearing only at the rate of 0.5 per sq. deg. Coherence times
decrease from 1-3 min on 200-km baselines to about 1 min on 600-km
baselines, suggesting that ionospheric phase variations contain
components with scales of a few hundred kilometres. The longest median
coherence time, at just over 3 min, is seen on the DE609 baseline, which
at 227 km is close to being the shortest. We see median coherence times
of between 80 and 110 s on the four longest baselines (580-600 km), and
about 2 min for the other baselines. The success of phase transfer from
calibrator to target is shown to be influenced by distance, in a manner
that suggests a coherence patch at 150-MHz of the order of 1 deg.
Although source structures cannot be measured in these observations, we
deduce that phase transfer is affected if the calibrator source
structure is not known. We give suggestions for calibration strategies
and choice of calibrator sources, and describe the access to the online
catalogue and data products.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201629016 |
| Published at | https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.02133 |
| Other links | http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2016A%26A...595A..86J |
| Downloads |
1608.02133
(Accepted author manuscript)
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