Cape Times

One step closer to experiment­s in field of dark energy and Fast Radio Bursts

- STAFF WRITER

THE developmen­t of the Hydrogen Intensity Real-time Analysis eXperiment (HIRAX) Correlator, a new component to the HIRAX radio interferom­eter, is set to bring cosmologis­ts one step closer to conducting ground-breaking science experiment­s in the field of dark energy and Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs).

The HIRAX radio interferom­eter of closely packed 6m dishes observing between 400 and 800 mHz is currently funded up to 256 dishes with a possible future expansion to 1 024 dishes.

The array will be co-located with the Square Kilometre Array at the MeerKAT radio telescope site which is operated by South African Radio Astronomy Observator­y (SARAO) in the Karoo.

The Swiss partners at ETH Zürich (ETH-Z) and Université de Genève (UniGe) have spent the last two years developing the HIRAX correlator with HIRAX partners at the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) and the University of Toronto (UofT).

This is a significan­t component of the cutting-edge HIRAX instrument, which consists of custom hardware and software.

As the name suggests, the HIRAX correlator cross-correlates the signals from all telescopes forming visibiliti­es.

This is the fundamenta­l data product of a radio telescope, which will be stored as the raw dataset for cosmology and map-making purposes.

The correlator will be installed on to the HIRAX 256-dish array.

Professor Kavilan Moodley, the HIRAX principal investigat­or and professor at UKZN said: “HIRAX is a truly internatio­nal astronomy project with key partners across the globe contributi­ng to the developmen­t of the instrument.”

Correlator engineer Thierry Viant explained that the correlator system is calibrated to receive large volumes of incoming data from the dishes. “It is built using a graphics processing unit (GPU's) board cluster, which is transmitte­d to 8 supercompu­ters.

“Each computer is equipped with 1 terabyte (TB) of memory, 2 GPUs for correlatio­n computing, and 4 network interface boards to receive data inputs. “We have received credible results using the dedicated astronomic­al software, Kotekan built by UofT.”

HIRAX completed its Radio Frequency Interferen­ce (RFI) testing of the HIRAX correlator at the European Laboratory for Nuclear Research and Particle Physics (CERN) in Switzerlan­d this year.

RFI is when unwanted radio frequencie­s are detected in the data collected from a radio instrument, which can easily make collected visibiliti­es unusable.

The MeerKAT radio telescope site is radio-controlled, with strict regulation­s to ensure that the hosted instrument­s are protected from RFI.

Because HIRAX is a guest instrument on the SARAO site, sharing space with several other radio astronomy projects including MeerKAT, HERA, and eventually the SKA, it is important that HIRAX not only protects its own data from RFI but is also a good neighbour to others.

To ensure this, all HIRAX instrument­ation is subjected to strict RFI testing to determine if shielding or other mitigation tactics are needed to protect the site's low-RFI environmen­t.

SARAO guest instrument manager Roufurd Julie said: “By sharing a location with MeerKAT, HIRAX will be able to conduct science in an area where radio frequency interferen­ce is tightly controlled, a move that has seen MeerKAT producing ground-breaking scientific discoverie­s since its launch three years ago.”

Professor Daniel Valuch from CERN added: “No two problems we had been following by our ElectroMag­netic Compatibil­ity (EMC) lab were the same. We are looking at very specific and obscure problems deep in the accelerato­rs – such as pulsed signals, cable interactio­ns, low-frequency fields, high-frequency fields, perturbati­on to ultra-precise devices and particle beams. Measuring the RF emissions from the HIRAX correlator was a great and interestin­g new experience for our small EMC laboratory.”

 ?? | DANIEL VALUCH CERN ?? INSIDE of the Faraday cage. Three different antennas were used to cover the frequency range from 200 MHz to 14 GHz.
| DANIEL VALUCH CERN INSIDE of the Faraday cage. Three different antennas were used to cover the frequency range from 200 MHz to 14 GHz.

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