Low-frequency radio observations at Lustbühel Observatory M. Panchenko(1), H.O. Rucker(2)

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Low-frequency radio observations at Lustbühel Observatory M. Panchenko(1), H.O. Rucker(2) (1) Space Research Institute, Graz, Austria (2) Commission for Astronomy, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Graz 1

Lustbühel Radio station Lustbühel Radio station consists of two log periodic Yagi antennas with a baseline distance of 80 m in east-west direction. The station observed Jupiter using 50 frequency channels receiver enabled simultaneous measurement with a bandwidth of 1 MHz. Since 1989 no significant antenna upgrades of the Lustbühel Jupiter radio station has been performed. 2

FFG ASAP 14 Proposal The main goal of the proposal is to thoroughly upgrade the existing radio facility at Lustbühel Observatory by constructing a new generation high efficient phased radio array, L-GURT, which will be primarily used as a ground radio observation support of ESA Solar Orbiter mission in the decametric frequency range 8-80 MHz. Applicants: Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences Institute of Communication Networks and Satellite Communications, TU Graz Commission for Astronomy of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. 3

Dynamic radio spectra of solar radio burst observed simultaneously by Wind spacecraft (400kHz 14 MHz) and ground based instruments: Nancay NDA (15-70) MHz, San Vito (70-85 MHz) and ARTEMIS (200-300 MHz). Adopted from Kerdraon et al,.2010. 4

5

GURT sub array Sub-array consists of 25 active dipoles (5 5). Each antenna element consists of two crossed dipole antenna providing polarization capability. The distance between the dipole antenna elements is 3.75 m, and the height is 1.6 m. Therefore one sub-array can be constructed on an area of 225 m² (15 x 15 m) 6

GURT sub array Sub-array consists of 25 active dipoles (5 5). Each antenna element consists of two crossed dipole antenna providing polarization capability. The distance between the dipole antenna elements is 3.75 m, and the height is 1.6 m. Therefore one sub-array can be constructed on an area of 225 m² (15 x 15 m) 7

Installation of GURT elements

Antenna type Num. of antennas Frequency range Phased array 25 dipoles 8-80 MHz Effective area Dynamic range Inst. bandwidth 350 m² (40 MHz) 90 db 72 MHz Number of freq. channels 4 x 14754 Freq. resolution Time resolution Polarization 4.88 khz down to 183.5 ns All Stokes parameters The station can be used as ground based facility to radio observation support of the Solar Orbiter/RPW providing complimentary observations of the solar radio emission with high temporal and frequency resolution. 9

Fig. 3. Sensitivity of one GURT sub-array depending on integration frequency band (dashed lines) and integration time. ( SED- Saturn Electrostatic Discharges, 3C75 is a binary black hole system in the Abell 400 cluster of galaxies, Cas-A - Cassiopeia A the brightest extrasolar radio source in the sky. 10

SCIENTIFIC OBJECTIVES One sub-array of GURT has high sensitivity for brightness temperature which allows to observe: Regular observation of the solar radio emission and sporadic solar bursts; Jovian radio emission; Pulsars at decametric frequencies; ionospheric and interplanetary scintillations; galactic non-thermal background; recombination lines and cosmological effects; 11

Simultaneous observations of solar type II radio bursts with one GURT sub-array (top panel) and UTR-2 (bottom panel) on July 24, 2014 12

Jupiter observations (Io-B source) with GURT (upper panels) and UTR-2 (lower panels). The panels show 4 seconds of the recording on 22 February 2015, starting from 20:00:21 UT. The right subpanels are zoomed fragments (1.2 s duration in a 14 25 MHz band) of the images located to the left 13