Question: Could Jupiter’s thermal radiation be observed with a small interferometer?
I did a meridian transit interferometer observation a Dec+22 last night for Taurus A.
When looking at the whole observation run (see image 1) I saw what looked like weak fringes around 03:00 utc that did not look like random noise.
“Radio Eyes” showed that the planet Jupiter was transiting at that time (03:02utc) but around 0.5 degrees lower in elevation, but still well within my main beam.
I studied a zoomed-in “line-up” with a fringe period of 178 seconds that corresponds to a pin source seen at Jupiter position at that time ( RA 07:47 & Dec +21:18) and got 8 fringe hits. (see Image 2).
It looks like there is another source also in the mix as well (3C192 is close by at RA 08.05 & Dec +24:10).
The Moon’s thermal radiation on 21cm is super strong with my setup (two 2meter dishes spaced 17.3 meters apart) , but what about a thermal source with a tiny diameter as Jupiter?
Could this be Jupiter or just wishful thinking?
Jan Lustrup LA3EQ
Norway
Image 1:

Image 2:

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Hi Wolfgang…
Thanks for the info and now I can put my mind at rest and not waist any more time on a possible Jupiter thermal detection.
Jan
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I agree with using a single 2.4m dish, But how about using TWO dishes in an interferometer setup?
Maybe still impossible? I guess so.
Jan
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Hi Eduard & all
Well my normal lower limit is around 10 Jy, but this varies due to external noise pick up vs antenna elevation/time of day etc..…. But I do see some sign of fringes from 5 Jy from time to time.
Here (see image below) is what could be Jupiter and 3C192 both at ~ 5 Jy and they are close to each other now. It seems to me I see only weak Jupiter fringes at first, then a fringe mix-up when both are in my antenna lobe at the same time, then later only 3C192.
Not sure but this is seen several times now. Jupiter moves at a slightly different speed then the background stars so the two sources are getting closer and closer together now. So I will have to wait several weeks before trying again when their separation is larger.
Jan Lustrup LA3EQ
Norway

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Hi Wolfgang,
Yes indeed….a follow up of FFT and averaging several days is the best way to go on.
You know, here in Norway we have a saying:
“necessity teaches the naked woman to spin clothes”
In other words: “make do with what you got”!
What I got:
Radio Eyes gives me Ra & Dec information, and the expected fringe period for any given declination at any meridian transit time.
It also gives me flux value of many sources, so now I have an idea about time of transit, expected fringe period and possible maximum fringe amplitude.
My antenna rotator display shows my azimuth and elevation.
I know my antenna baseline length and antenna HPBW.
RadioSkypipe has a good averaging option and one may zoom the graph in both X/Y axis, so I set up the time axis to 180 seconds pr vertical divider (the expected fringe period of Jupiter meridian transit) and did a 500 times post detection average. What looked like just noise in the raw data in the interferogram now turned into lots of nice fringes with many lining up (red *) to 180 seconds each! But of course Jupiter and 3C192 are only 20 minutes apart in transit time and a few degrees separated in elevation, so they will interact by having slightly different fringe periods, fringes mingeling together at times.
So Wolfgang, am I detecting any type of radiation at all from Jupiter? If so, what type of radiation? Or is this only synchrotron radiation from the extragalactic source 3C192?
So far the jury is out.
Jan Lustrup LA3EQ
Norway

The t9From: 'fasleitung3' via Society of Amateur
Radio Astronomers [mailto:sara...@googlegroups.com]
Sent: tirsdag 2. desember 2025 08:52
To: sara...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [SARA] Re: Could Jupiter be detected with an
interferometer?
Hi Jan,
What would really help with your analysis is to follow up on the idea of FFT of your data. I understand it is not so easy for you to implement it, but it would really get some good insight.
One of the things you could also do, is to average the transit of several days to improve SNR. Of course this could also be combined with the FFT.
Best regards,
Wolfgang
.
Good idea Alex, that’s worth a try,,
Here attached is last night’s file I named “radioskypipe 2 dec25.spd”.
Jan
From: 'Alex P' via Society of Amateur Radio
Astronomers [mailto:sara...@googlegroups.com]
Sent: tirsdag 2. desember 2025 13:33
To: Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Subject: Re: [SARA] Re: Could Jupiter be detected with an
interferometer?
Not sure an FFT will show much as the 'signal' is of near amplitude to, and quite similar to the signature of the noise.
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Sorry Alex, I do not know how to do that.
Jan
From: 'b alex pettit jr' via Society of Amateur Radio
Astronomers [mailto:sara...@googlegroups.com]
Sent: tirsdag 2. desember 2025 14:14
To: 'Jan Lustrup' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers
Subject: Re: [SARA] Re: Could Jupiter be detected with an
interferometer?
Jan,
Its a binary data file .. can you create an ASCII file *.txt, *.csv or something ?

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