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Published June 1997 | Published
Journal Article Open

A Wide-Bandwidth Digital Recording System for Radio Pulsar Astronomy

Abstract

The study of radio pulsars at the highest time resolution is currently limited by the capability of the signal detection system to accept a wide-bandwidth signal, and to sample the data rapidly enough. We describe a new instrument for pulsar research which utilizes baseband recording at 400 Mbit s - t to achieve both a high bandwidth and a high sustained data rate. The wide bandwidth digital recording (WBDR)system is based on a custom analog/digital VLSI digitizer operating at 50 MHz, and a commercial digital cassette tape recorder. Signal analysis is performed entirely in software, using a massively parallel computer. Since we record a representation of the electric vector of the pulsar emission, the instrument is very flexible, and the data can be analyzed in several modes in software. We can synthesize the software equivalent of a conventional hardware filterbank, and we have implemented a "coherent dedispersion" algorithm, which yields a sample time of 10 ns. The combination of a wide bandwidth and sustained data rate make this instrument a unique and powerful tool for pulsar astronomy. Our instrument is particularly well-suited to searches for millisecond pulsars at low frequency, in directions where pulsed signals are strongly dispersed by the interstellar medium. We present results based on dual-polarization test observations in a 600::':: 25 MHz band at the Owens Valley Radio Observatory 40-m Telescope.

Additional Information

© Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Provided by the NASA Astrophysics Data System. Received 1996 November 12; accepted 1997 February 21. We are grateful to Stuart Anderson and Vicky Kaspi for their help in implementing the coherent dedispersion algorithm, and comments on the text. John Yamasaki, Derrick Key, Mark Hodges, and Russ Keeney helped with hardware construction. We thank Shri Kulkami, José Navarro, and Jagmit Sandhu for many stimulating discussions. Datatape Inc., provided advice and engineering support throughout the development of this system. This work was supported by the NSF under Grant Nos. AST 90-20787 and ASC 93-18145

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August 19, 2023
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October 18, 2023