This is the website for the 2016 NASSP masters Fundamentals of Radio Interferometry course. The course is based on the ipython-based book of the same name. This site will be updated regularly.
Lectures run from March 15 to May 20, 2016 from 2:00 - 4:00 (check the outline below for dates) at UCT in lecture theatre 2A in the RW James Building. Practical session are in the NASSP computing lab, Maths Building, Room 408. See the Upper Campus Map.
- March 15: Introduction to Radio Interferometry
- March 17: Radio Science and Positional Astronomy
- April 5: Fourier Theory and Discrete Fourier Transforms - G. Jozsa (pdf, odp)
- April 7: Fourier Tutorial and Visibility Space (part 1)
- April 12: Visibility Space - J. Girard (pdf)
- April 14: Practical Session - S. Makhathini (notebook, data)
- April 19: Imaging: Spatial Frequencies, Sampling Functions, and Point Spread Functions - G. Foster (pdf, odp)
- April 21: Imaging: Gridding, Weight Functions, the W-term - G. Foster (pdf, odp)
- April 26: Deconvolution - G. Foster (pdf, odp)
- April 28: Practical Session - S. Makhathini
- May 3: The Radio Interferometric Measurement Equation (RIME) - O. Smirnov (pdf, odp)
- May 6: Practical Session - S. Makhathini, S. Sirothia
- May 10: Instrumentation - G. Foster (pdf, odp)
- May 13: Calibration - T. Grobler (pdf, odp)
- May 17: Practical Session - S. Sirothia
- May 20: Exam Talks and Questions
- Radio Science using Interferometric Arrays
- Basic remarks on astrophysics
- Electromagnetic radiation and astronomical quantities
- Radiation transport
- Radio regime
- Black body radiation
- Synchrotron emission
- Line emission
- Astronomical radio sources
- A brief introduction to interferometry
- Limits of single dishes
- Modern interferometric arrays
- Further reading and references
- Mathematical Groundwork
- Complex Numbers
- Important functions
- Fourier Series
- The Fourier Transform
- Convolution
- Auto-correlation and cross-correlation
- Fourier Theorems
- The Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) and the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT)
- Sampling Theory
- Linear Algrebra
- Least-squares Minimization
- Solid Angle
- Spherical Trigonometry
- Further Reading and References
- Positional Astronomy
- Visibility Space
- Imaging
- Deconvolution in Imaging
- Observing Systems
- Jones Notation
- The Measurement Equation (RIME)
- Analogue Electronics
- Digital Electronics
- Primary Beam
- Polarization and Antenna Feeds
- Propagation Effects
- Radio Frequency Interference (RFI)
- Further Reading and References
- Calibration
There are three assignments, only two are required.
- Assignment 1: Positional Astronomy and Visibility Space Problem Set (due April 19)
- Assignment 2: An implementation of Clark's CLEAN Method, example data is included in the FITS data tarball below (due May 6)
- Assignment 3: An implementation of StEfCal (due May 27)
The exam is a project to reduce a real measurement set from a KAT-7 observation, and write up the steps and results in a report. Each student will present their results in a 5-10 minute presentation on the final day. Students will be given the opportunity to revise their report in the week after the talks.
To setup the ipython notebook environment to interactively use the book follow the virtualenv setup guide.
There are additional large files (> 1MB), mainly FITS images, which are needed for some of the sections, these can be downloaded here, the original simulated KAT-7 measurement sets can be downloaded here. To place them in the correct paths do the following:
$ cd [fundamentals root]/data/
$ mv [location of download]/fundamentals_fits.tar.gz .
$ tar xvzf fundamentals_fits.tar.gz
$ cd simulated_kat_7_vis/
$ mv [location of download]/simulated_KAT-7_ms.tar.gz .
$ tar xvzf simulated_KAT-7_ms.tar.gz
- Notebook 1 Data Set (4.7 MB)
- Measurement Set 1 (187 MB)
- Measurement Set 2 (184 MB)
- Measurement Set 3 (264 MB)
For data reduction we will be using NRAO's CASA software package.
- Alexander Akoto-Danso (@akotodanso)
- Marcellin Atemkeng (@atemkeng)
- Landman Bester (@landmanbester)
- Tariq Blecher (@TariqBlecher)
- Roger Deane (@rdeane)
- Griffin Foster (@griffinfoster)
- Julien Girard (@JulienNGirard)
- Trienko Grobler (@Trienko)
- Benna Hugo (@bennahugo)
- Gyula (Josh) Jozsa (@gigjozsa)
- Ermias Abebe Kassaye (@Ermiasabebe)
- Jonathan Kenyon (@JSKenyon)
- Sphesihle Makhathini (@SpheMakh)
- Modhurita Mitra (@modhurita)
- Gijs Molenaar (@gijzelaerr)
- Jared Norman (@jfunction)
- Ridhima Nunhokee (@Chuneeta)
- Simon Perkins (@sjperkins)
- Laura Richter (@LauraRichter)
- Lerato Sebokolodi (@Sebokolodi)
- Oleg Smirnov (@o-smirnov)
- Ulrich Mbou Sob (@ulricharmel)
- Cyril Tasse (@cyriltasse)
- Kshitij Thorat (@KshitijT)