next up previous contents index
Next: Mapping Up: Sensitivity Previous: Sensitivity   Contents   Index

Detection experiments

The point source sensitivity (one $\sigma$ level) for an $N$ antenna array, over a bandwidth $\delta\nu$ in a time $\delta t$ is given by


\begin{displaymath}
\delta S = \frac{\rho _{e} T_{sys}}{\eta _{p}\eta _{j}
\sqrt...
... \sqrt{\delta\nu \delta t}} \cdot \frac{1}{\sqrt{N_{\rm pol}}}
\end{displaymath} (1)

where

The instrumental phase jitter $\sigma _{j}$ typically ranges between 3 and 5 degrees at 90 GHz, and increases linearly with frequency. The short and long term atmospheric phase fluctuations $\sigma _{p}$ depend on the baseline length and water vapor content of the atmosphere. 15 degrees is a typical value for short ($<$ 100m) baselines.

With typical values for Plateau de Bure and assuming 6 antennas, we find at 90 GHz $\delta S =$ 0.08mJy ( $\eta _{j}*\eta _{j}=0.96$) to 0.15mJy ( $\eta _{j}*\eta _{j}=0.54$) for a one hour integration in a 3600MHz bandwidth and using both polarizations. For a full synthesis (2 configurations, or 11 hours on source), this goes down to about 0.03mJy ( $\eta _{j}*\eta _{j}=0.96$) to 0.04mJy ( $\eta _{j}*\eta _{j}=0.54$). At 115 GHz, the sensitivity is degraded by about a factor 2 because of higher system noise and atmospheric phase fluctuations. At 230 GHz, the expected rms noise is 0.26 to 0.53mJy in one hour (0.08 mJy to 0.14 mJy after 11 hours in average winter conditions).


next up previous contents index
Next: Mapping Up: Sensitivity Previous: Sensitivity   Contents   Index
Gildas manager 2014-07-01