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  2. Aperture synthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture_synthesis

    Aperture synthesis imaging was later developed at radio wavelengths by Martin Ryle and coworkers from the Radio Astronomy Group at Cambridge University. Martin Ryle and Tony Hewish jointly received a Nobel Prize for this and other contributions to the development of radio interferometry. The radio astronomy group in Cambridge went on to found ...

  3. Transient Array Radio Telescope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transient_Array_Radio...

    The Transient Array Radio Telescope (TART) is a low-cost open-source array radio telescope consisting of 24 all-sky GNSS receivers operating at the L1-band (1.575 GHz). TART was designed as an all-sky survey instrument for detecting radio bursts, as well as providing a test-bed for the development of new synthesis imaging and calibration ...

  4. Very-long-baseline interferometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Very-long-baseline_interfe...

    VLBI is best known for imaging distant cosmic radio sources, spacecraft tracking, and for applications in astrometry. However, since the VLBI technique measures the time differences between the arrival of radio waves at separate antennas, it can also be used "in reverse" to perform Earth rotation studies, map movements of tectonic plates very ...

  5. Radio astronomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_astronomy

    Radio astronomy is a subfield of astronomy that studies celestial objects at radio frequencies. The first detection of radio waves from an astronomical object was in 1933, when Karl Jansky at Bell Telephone Laboratories reported radiation coming from the Milky Way .

  6. Astronomical interferometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomical_interferometer

    Interferometry is most widely used in radio astronomy, in which signals from separate radio telescopes are combined. A mathematical signal processing technique called aperture synthesis is used to combine the separate signals to create high-resolution images.

  7. van Cittert–Zernike theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_Cittert–Zernike_theorem

    The van Cittert–Zernike theorem has important implications for radio astronomy. With the exception of pulsars and masers, all astronomical sources are spatially incoherent. Nevertheless, because they are observed at distances large enough to satisfy the van Cittert–Zernike theorem, these objects exhibit a non-zero degree of coherence at ...

  8. Jan Högbom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Högbom

    Högbom is most well known for the development of the CLEAN algorithm for deconvolution of images created in radio astronomy, published in 1974. [2] [3] This allows the use of arrays of small antennae, generating incomplete sampling data, to effectively simulate a much larger aperture. Högbom was also the first to use Earth rotation synthesis ...

  9. Bandwidth smearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandwidth_smearing

    Bridle, Alan H. and Schwab, Frederic R., Wide Field Imaging I: Bandwidth and Time-Average Smearing in Synthesis imaging in radio astronomy (1989), eds. Richard A. Perley, Frederic R. Schwab, Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series, vol. 6, ISBN 0-937707-23-6, p. 247.