Last years 21cm interferomerter observation.

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Jan Lustrup

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6:31 AM (6 hours ago) 6:31 AM
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Here are last year’s  21cm observations with my two dish interferometer.

With just one dish I see only 4 sources (Sun, Cassiopeia A, Cygnus A and Taurus A).

With two dishes I now see over 50 sources, with weakest just under 10 Jy. This is a BIG improvement!

 

My setup is two 1.9meter dishes with stovepipe feeds. The LNA’s are SM5DGX type (NF <0.2dB)

The antennas are spaced 17.2 meters on an east / west base line. I used two “Sawbird+H1” lna’s + a 1420MHz interdigital 5MHz band pass filter. RF Detection is done with an “AD8362” detector and by phase switching correlation with a “lock-in amplifier”. Detection fringes are displayed in two hour long, +/- 1 Volt graphs & logging is done with “RadioSkypipe” software.

 

The relative broad main antenna beam causes some problems with sources close together as fringes interact (an FFT display would help here). Other problems are sometimes caused by ground noise pick-up at low elevations and / or sun noise pick-up via side lobes.

 

Jan Lustrup  LA3EQ

Norway.

 

 

 

 

Standard setup parameters:

"SM5DGX" LNA,   sawbird H1 to filter to sawbird H1 to the AD8362 RF detector to lock-in amp

 

Equations = zero, AVG x25, Graph scale: Normaly  two hour, two volt peak to peak recordings

Background noise >40mV

Date dec.2025 Yellow background shows sources seen with only one dish.

source

date

Celestrial radio sources

CTA

CTB

3C

M

J

RA

DEC

ELEVATION

JANSKY @ 1420MHz

fringe period

mVolt ptp

1

16.11.2025

The  Sun

Our Star

 

 

 

 

 

X

X

X

 

X

23000

2

15.11.2025

Cassiopeia A

Remnent

 

 

3C461

 

 

23:23

58,8

90,4

2400

316

4960

3

15.11.2025

Cygnus A

Elliptical galaxy

 

 

3C405

 

 

19:59

40,7

72,3

1495

219

4820

4

16.11.2025

Taurus A

CRAB NEBULA

CTA36

 

3C144

M1

 

05:34

22

53,6

940

179

2330

5

16.11.2025

Our Moon

399800km

 

 

 

 

 

X

X

24,0

900

 

1110

6

12.06.2025

Nebula

W38

 

CTB52

 

M17

 

18:17

-16,1

16

380

173

870

7

20.06.2025

VIRGO A

 

 

 

3C274

M87

J1230+1223

12:30

12,4

44,0

198

170

710

8

18.11.2025

 

 

 

CTB53

 

 

 

18:26

-12,3

19,1

200@960MHz

170

540

9

25.11.2025

 

NGC6604

 

CTB50

 

 

 

18:18

-11,9

19,6

330

170

500

10

19.11.2025

Nebula

W51

 

CTB73

3C400

 

 

19:23

14,5

46

 375?

172

470

11

20.06.2025

Orion Nebula

 

CTA37

 

3C145

M42

J0535-0523

05:35

-5,4

26,2

300

167

425

12

31.10.2024

Nebula

W28

 

 

 

M20

 

17:58

-22,1

9

360

179

420

13

02.11.2024

 

 

 

CTB59

 

 

 

18:47

-2,0

29,5

300

166

300

14

13.06.2025

 

 

 

CTB60

3C392

 

 

18:56

1,3

32,9

171

166

280

15

16.11.2025

Jellyfish nebula

supernova remnant

 

 

3C157

 

IC443

06:17

22,4

54,3

150

280

230

16

02.11.2024

Orion Horse Head

nebula

 

 

3C147.1

 

J0541-154

05:41

-1,9

29,7

256@2700MHz

166

200

17

18.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C123

 

 

04:37

29,7

61,3

46

191

200

18

28.11.2025

 

 

 

CTB56

 

 

 

18:33

-8,7

22,9

135@960MHz

168

200?

19

09.06.2025

D Galaxy

 

 

 

3C295

 

 

14:08

52,0

83,8

23

270

150

20

23.07.2025

Hercules A

 

 

 

3C348

 

J1651+0459

16:51

4,6

36,6

47

167

150

21

01.03.2025

Quasars

 

 

 

3C273B

 

J1229+0203

12:29

2,1

33,7

46

166

140

22

01.03.2025

D Galaxy

 

CTA76

 

3C353

 

J1720-0058

17:20

-0,6

30,6

57

197

120

23

22.11.2025

NEXT

 

 

 

3C147

 

 

05:42

49,9

81,4

21

258

120

24

22.11.2025

 

weak

CTA91

 

 

 

 

20:46

50,3

82,2

180@960MHz

167

90

25

17.11.2025

Rosette nebula

 

 

CTB21

 

 

 

06:32

4,8

35,4

300

167

90

26

25.07.2025

Quasars

 

 

 

3C380

 

 

18:28

48,7

80,3

14

251

90

27

25.07.2025

X

 

 

 

3C119

 

 

04:32

41,6

73,2

8

222

90

28

22.07.2025

 

 

 

 

3C452

 

 

22:46

39,7

71,3

11

216

90

29

23.11.2025

 

 

CTA33

 

 

HB9

 

05:01

46,5

78,1

160@960MHz

241

90

30

22.07.2025

 

 

 

 

 

 

J2253 1608

22:54

16,1

47,7

11

173

85

31

02.11.2024

Hydra A

Low elevation

19.5deg

CTA47

 

 

J0918-1205

09:18

-12,1

19,5

50

170

80

32

17.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C270

 

J1219 0549

12:19

5,8

37,5

21

167

80

34

27.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C286

 

 

13:31

30,5

62,1

16

193

80

35

20.11.2025

Perseus A

 

 

 

3C84

 

NGC1275

03:20

41,5

73

13

222

80

36

18.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C111

 

 

04:31

38,0

69.5

15

211

80

37

25.07.2025

 

few fringes seen

CTA106

 

3C465

 

 

23:04

27,0

58,6

8

186

80

38

28.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3c66

 

 

02:23

43,0

74,5

9

227

70

39

18.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C33

 

 

01:09

13,3

45

12

170

70

40

21.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C98

 

 

03:59

10,4

42

10

223

70

41

23.11.2025

 

 

 

 

 

HB11

 

08:12

47.9

79.1

40@178MHz

248

70

42

21.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C109

 

 

04:14

11,2

42,8

10

223

70

43

21.11.2025

 

 

 

CTB98

3C438

 

 

21:56

38.00

69,5

7

211

70

44

16.11.2025

into noise

noisy

 

 

3C433

 

 

21:24

25,1

56,7

12

183

60

45

18.11.2025

Tree line!

Low elevation

CTA99

 

3C444

 

 

22:14

-17,0

13,6

10

174

60

46

18.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C134

 

 

05:04

38,1

69,7

10

211

60

47

01.01.2025

 

make new one.

 

 

3C409

 

 

20:14

23,6

77

13

235

40

48

20.11.2025

 

weak

 

 

3C234

 

 

10:02

28,8

60,3

29@178MHz

189

40

49

make a new observation

 

 

 

 

3C227

 

 

09:48

7,4

39

7

167

40

50

make a new observation

 

 

 

 

 

 

J1007 0730

10:08

7,5

39

6

167

40

51

20.11.2025

 

 

 

 

3C192

 

 

08:05

24,2

55,7

5

182

40

 

 

 

RADIO STAR SOURCES dec 2025 short hvit_excel97.xls

Peet Denny

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6:38 AM (6 hours ago) 6:38 AM
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Very exciting stuff, Jan.

I'd love to progress eventually to building a small interferometry array.
How hard was it to sync timing on the two dishes? I understand that at 1.4GHz, the timing needs to be pretty bang on.

Got any photos of your setup? :) 


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wallacefj

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7:30 AM (5 hours ago) 7:30 AM
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Wonderful! Thanks for sharing!



Sent from my Galaxy


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Marcus Fisher

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7:45 AM (5 hours ago) 7:45 AM
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You should do a presentation at Eastern conference on this setup and results (first week of August)

Jan Lustrup

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8:28 AM (4 hours ago) 8:28 AM
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Hi,

I use beam heading towards the meridian (due south) and set up the elevation as needed on both antennas and do  2 hours for each observation displayed & saved to “RadioSkypipe” software.

I use the Sun to calibrate the elevation and azimuth, and after that I use a digital angle measuring unit to set the dish to the correct declination while the azimuth always stays due south..

To find the elevation I use “RadioEyes” program by Jim Sky.

I use a DBM mixer on one antenna coax to invert the phase 100 times a second (I use a 100Hz oscillator for this) , and this same signal is the “reference timing” signal that goes the reference input of the lock-in amp (or switching rate of your synchronous detector circuit). Other than that there are no timing issues as the earth rotation does the rest.

Even the two antenna coaxial cables do not have to be exactly the same length!

 

My setup is on a wooden “breadboard” as I have not built a box for it yet.

Images below is drawing of setup, photo of both antennas detecting Cygnus A and my radio room with the “breadboard phase correlator” setup on the table.

73’s Jan LA3EQ

 

 

21cm multiplier interferometer & total powerdrawing of setup 17feb  2026.JPG

 

dishes look towards cygnus a.jfif

 

 

radio room testing breadboard correlator.jpg

image005.jpg
image006.jpg
image007.jpg

Andrew Thornett

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10:58 AM (2 hours ago) 10:58 AM
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Wow! Great post and great work. Are you going to write this up for SARA J. And present at SARA conference?


From: 'Jan Lustrup' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 17, 2026 11:31:33 AM
To: sara-list@googlegroups. com <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [SARA] Last years 21cm interferomerter observation.
 
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Marcus D. Leech

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11:04 AM (2 hours ago) 11:04 AM
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On 2026-02-17 06:31, 'Jan Lustrup' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers wrote:

Here are last year’s  21cm observations with my two dish interferometer.

With just one dish I see only 4 sources (Sun, Cassiopeia A, Cygnus A and Taurus A).

With two dishes I now see over 50 sources, with weakest just under 10 Jy. This is a BIG improvement!

I have often said that interferometers just "want to work".   

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