-A two element interferometer doesn't have to be a *fixed* interferometer. You can change the spacing every few days and get new fringes for the same objects. Convolve those
Hi Marcus,
Thank you so much for the response (as always!). I hadn't really given enough consideration to moving the dishes between observations: I was thinking about changing the spacing as being something only feasible for advanced setups that can measure time very precisely, but for a shorter separation like the one I would have it wouldn't be an issue. Similarly, I hadn't considered that even just measuring the amplitude of the complex output from the interferometer is more stable than a single receiver: I keep forgetting that interferometers have advantages outside of higher spatial resolution, but that definitely seems useful.
Also, I really do appreciate that new science is basically impossible for amateur astronomy, and especially so for amateur radio astronomy. That's never been my goal: it's just that I want to make sure that, since I'm basically doing a much lower-quality version of research that's already been done, I still have results that are independent enough of the instrument I used that I can see if my data lines up with real experimental results. I'm not trying to find anything new, but I do think that attempting to replicate results from other experiments is a worthwhile scientific exercise, even if there are hard limits on how scientific I can actually be and the experiments I'm trying to replicate are much more advanced than I could ever achieve.
I hope that clarifies my goal somewhat. I really do appreciate what you mean about amateur radio astronomy being mostly an engineering exercise and I'm content with that, so thank you for giving such a clear answer.
Thanks,
Aidan
On Tuesday, January 11, 2022 at 3:23:30 PM UTC-5 Marcus wrote:
On 2022-01-11 14:46, Apeirohedron wrote:
Hi all,
So as I've mentioned several times previously I'm working on a two-element interferometer for the 21cm line. Through people's (incredibly helpful) responses on this forum and trying to find resources on my own, I have a pretty clear idea as to how to build a two-element interferometer high-quality enough for amateur radio astronomy, but one thing I haven't found or heard much information on is how to get useful data out of the fringes such an interferometer would produce.
I know that in professional radio astronomy, aperture synthesis techniques, where the correlation for each baseline can be combined into a 2D image, but these techniques work on the principle that with a large amount of baselines, the fringes will only line up around a single point. As such, it seems that these techniques would require a large number of individual telescopes and are impossible even in theory for a two-element interferometer with only one baseline.
To be clear, this was not my goal, since producing a satisfactory image would require an unreasonable number of dishes. However, I assumed from the fact that so many people on this forum encouraged people to build interferometers that there was something useful that could be done a two-element interferometer if properly constructed. However, after searching for a long time now I haven't found much in terms of advice on processing those fringes into something meaningful about the source being viewed. I know there are algorithms for deconvolving data to recreate the original source, but with only two I'm not sure how accurate that data would actually be.
So my question is this: is there in fact some form of analysis that could yield meaningful information from such a simple setup, or is it the case that on an amateur level, the only reason to make an interferometer is because it's an interesting challenge? I really don't mean to belittle anyone's work in the slightest, but my goal is to find results that can be meaningfully analyzed and compared to 'real' results, and if an interferometer at this scale isn't compatible with that goal I'm not sure I would want to pursue it. This is a weird question to ask, but I think it's important so I can understand what it is I'm getting into, and if anyone does have any advice about analysis techniques for two-element interferometers I really appreciate it.
Thank you,Aidan
-A two element interferometer doesn't have to be a *fixed* interferometer. You can change the spacing every few days and get new fringes for the same objects. Convolve those
measurements in "stack", and you end up with something approaching a point response. The resulting *amplitude* of that response tells you something about the
brightness of the object along a single axis.
You can also take the (complex) fringe response and compute the complex envelope, which will yield something that is an approximation of the aggregate (convolved)
beam-response of your two antennas to the object in question. Basically, like a radiometer, but MUCH more stable.
The main reason for an amateur building a simple, fixed, two-element interferometer is that it will operate at much closer to theoretical sensitivity, and it tends to
reject or reduce many of the non-idealities of a single-dish radiometer. That *in turn* means that you stand a better chance of getting meaningful science results
out of it.
But I would caution. 99% of amateur radio astronomy is primarily an *engineering* exercise. The average back-yard radio astronomer, using average back-yard
budgets is unlikely to be doing "new science". For back-yard *optical* astronomers, this is also true, but to a lesser degree. Patient back-yard optical astronomers
have detected new comets, etc.
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I love it! I happen to have two identical dishes like that. So top of my list for the future when health is a bit better and it is not so cold for an old geezer like me. I will start gathering the necessary parts now….
Larry
Pahrump, NV
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/CAABBjRBExah2%2BEPifRj0yeNiPK%2B3Ri8XxSiq51eS4GsxaXWRwA%40mail.gmail.com.
If your garden is not so large you also can build a interferometer on 12GHz with thesame $10 LNB'sseeIf down then see att.Michiel
Is there a detailed parts list for this interferometer? Sure would save a lot of time of so. What are the feeds for the two antenna? Home built or ? Any help out there? This looks to be a great project?
And some questions regards construction. I know zip regards these methods: so dumb question #1) Is there any benefit to have the antenna mounted to a moveable truss so that the reflectors could always be perpendicular to the target? And with tracking of the dish in both azimuth and elevation? Does that help anything? Just a few words needed here – like what a dumb a$$ question, or yeah that would work great or no benefit… Dumb question #2 would longer recording times be of any benefit as this kind of mount might give a lot more data to work with per session time: record for 30 minutes, repeat every half hour as long as target was visible to apparatus. Repeat for days on end if necessary. Make any sense at all? Dumb question #3. What is a rule of thump for antenna spacing if there is one? Wider better? Point me to a simple tutorial or spreadsheet?
Or just ignore me, lol…
Larry
Pahrump, NV
From: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Michiel Klaassen
Sent: Wednesday, January 12, 2022 8:02 AM
To: sara-list <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [SARA] How to extract useful data from two-element interferometer fringes
If your garden is not so large you also can build a interferometer on 12GHz with thesame $10 LNB's
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/CAABBjRBExah2%2BEPifRj0yeNiPK%2B3Ri8XxSiq51eS4GsxaXWRwA%40mail.gmail.com.
Is there a detailed parts list for this interferometer? Sure would save a lot of time of so. What are the feeds for the two antenna? Home built or ? Any help out there? This looks to be a great project?
And some questions regards construction. I know zip regards these methods: so dumb question #1) Is there any benefit to have the antenna mounted to a moveable truss so that the reflectors could always be perpendicular to the target? And with tracking of the dish in both azimuth and elevation? Does that help anything? Just a
few words needed here – like what a dumb a$$ question, or yeah that would work great or no benefit… Dumb question #2 would longer recording times be of an
The larger the spacing (in wavelengths) the higher the spatial resolution (the faster the fringes are produced). Oncebenefit as this kind of mount might give a lot more data to work with per session time: record for 30 minutes, repeat every half hour as long as target was visible to apparatus. Repeat for days on end if necessary. Make any sense at all? Dumb question #3. What is a rule of thump for antenna spacing if there is one? Wider better? Point me to a simple tutorial or spreadsheet?
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/001901d807db%243808e950%24a81abbf0%24%40mayfco.com.
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List, be gentle as you read through my scribbles below:
I need your help! I have been staring at the interferometer diagram in the pdf file that Michiel sent to the list sent to us, second page of the file, and am stumped on several components. I am gathering the components in the electronics 2nd page schematic to build an observatory exclusively for 1420 MHz with maybe a +-50 MHz band width. I have a pair of DISH offset dish hardware that I am going to use. But I am having some trouble understanding some of the items and how to use them. The DISH components I have, use I think, LNA, rather than LNBF pieces for getting the signal and passing it along. However I do not know that for sure! What else is not clear is the brand used in this schematic since I will need to find and replace the internal Xtal with an input from the local 25Mhz oscillator shown on the schematic. I have no clue as to what kind of LNBF would be able to use with the DISH reflector: I ask because some of the reviews of available LNBF units have indicated that they are not useable with Dish equipment. This might mean simply that an LNBF works differently than DISH receivers are expecting to see. I just do not know, lol. Any one have ideas as to a brand name LNBF that might work with the dish reflectors as that is the only part of DISH I use? The next issue, for me, filters used to reduce the bandwidth of the signal being collected and processed. The schematic show a low pass filter in series with what really appears to me to be a high pass filter and the combo seems to make a bandpass filter. The filter 3 db corner points appear to be 950 MHz for the low pass and 656 MHZ for what I call the high pass filter. I thinks that makes the 3 dm bandwidth of the pair about 803 MHz. Would that make the LNBF downconverter output frequency be around that frequency? If so, then in that case could I be looking to find a Bandpass filter with values of 3 db points at 656MHz and 950 MHZ points? Seems reasonable to me, but as I said, theory of electronics is not something I am very familiar with, lol. Any advice for me in this regard? And finally, the A/D converter: I am planning on using an Arduino Mega 2560 microcontroller which has an ESP32WRM wifi on board and it will do all the on platform signal collector for my GPS Timing Signal for UTC time, latitude and longitude, a weather station module for atmosphere pressure, temperature and humidity; the pointing angle of the dish(s) as outputs from two high resolution rotary encoders, as well as the schematic output signals for processing as digital signals. These and probably more will be passed to a Raspberry PI 4 (I may use my Pi 3 B+ however as it now collects the GPS and weather data in my office already), The Pi will be used to host a VPN system (I have the basic understanding of that) for building an html system after processing the data even more. My question is what resolution of ADC do I need to add to the arduino Mega because it is only a 10 bit ADC but that doesn’t seem like enough. I have a 12 bit, 14 bit, a 16 bit and I think a 24 bit ADC modules kicking around unused right now for signal processing.
I have already purchased some of the items but the above items stump me. So, any thoughts or ideas for me?
In any case, I thank you all in advance for any help and light you might be able to shine on my questions!
Larry
Pahrump, NV
From: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Michiel Klaassen
Sent: Wednesday, January 12, 2022 8:02 AM
To: sara-list <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [SARA] How to extract useful data from two-element interferometer fringes
If your garden is not so large you also can build a interferometer on 12GHz with thesame $10 LNB's
see
If down then see att.
Michiel
.
Jeremy, and all ya’ll others who might find it interesting…
I do all of my own work in building my structural hardware such as the mounts, alt and az drives design and fab work as well as the electrical & electronics work. I am retired and use as much recycled components as I can. As to the electronics, involved, I shop around. Most all of the electronics, except for the feed horns which are available via either Banggood or Amazon and I have purchased most of these already. For instance the 25 MHz clock, is a standard clock used for PLL work and the one I purchased (well, I buy a second unit for replacement in case of failures), cost me about 7 bucks. Same with the rest of the components on the schematic (yeah, it is pretty poor in information) I have the logarithmic rectifiers as modules, the Ad8203 and the summing mixer also which has I forget the number, but is an ADxxxx also. The splitters are about 10 bucks apiece. I have a pile of Arduino microcontrollers from the nano to the mega versions all with either com port connections, ethernet or wifi capabilities. I have a Raspberry pi 3B+ that may become the web host for the system. I have 2 dish 500 parabolic offset reflectors with feeds that will be replaced with single feed ones and they are about 15 bucks each. They have to be modified to remove the 9MHz – 10 MHz Xtal, and then the input from the oscillator clock added in its place. This 25 MHZ clock can be tuned from 8Mhz to 160 MHz, either integer or fractional Hz capable, with input control from the microcontroller. I build my own cables and for the high frequency and I use semi rigid coax which has a flexible but stiff outer shielding. I am mounting both of my offset dishes to a common, but moveable beam that is the pointing part for the pair of them as this is going to be a tracking system. I am currently in the design phase of my project for the alt az drive and have devised a way to fab large drive “gears”. The alt part of the system will use a periodic pulse to move it and will be guided in time by the period that the signal will be in the main part of the receiver dish reflector. I have a pair of high resolution rotary encoders to tell me and the system what it is pointing at. Probably, all in all, I have a couple hundred bucks into my system right now if spares are included. So, I am cheap, lol. Will it all work? Well the last system I built worked first time out of the box so to speak. I will use an FFT to look at the channel that comes from Summing Mixer which is actually a multiplication function (ie it is really modulation and when using the log rectifier produces this effect) when examined. I am looking at the signal characteristics only and have used NI’s Multisim software to first help me define what I am searching for, building a test signal, and then using multisim and FFT to tell me what it decodes as. All is good for what I am going to do. I have planned on installing the on board electronics suite in a weather tight metal enclosure between he pair of dish mounted feeds to shorten the connections and eliminate any spurious RFI, if I can. I plan on using TCP over wifi to get he signals through my VPN dedicated router to my main computer for doing all the collection, display and analysis work if any.
The bottom line for all of this is for me to have fun and learning new things before I step off the mortal coil. Mostly as cheap as I can. I am also gong the have a full power point set of charts describing my system as well and hopefully will host it along with my commercial free web site showing all of the charts and info pertinent to the is observatory operation. Not there yet however.. But you can look at my auto portion I built when I was racing my land speed record holder car. It is http://www.mayfco.com, just click on the first page active link and get the index page. Then surf around. It is commercial and user free and has a lot of car related information on it, just no astronomy related stuff yet. Oh, I built a magnetometer using active IC pieces from Texas instruments some of that data may be included as well. I have an Arduino UNO connected to a BME 280E module weather station as well and a GPS module that are providing both temperature, humidity and atmospheric pressure in psia as well as UTC time, latitude and longitude for my basic location and operating parameters. I am currently peeved at myself for inability to find canned dashboard data visualization items to display such things as pointing angles, signal levels, etc… But I will get there, hopefully.
Still seeking the data visualization and process control elements for building a control system and its dashboard…. Free stuff if possible… things like analog meter displays the pointing angles, time, active buttons, and displays for things like voltage levels, status, ect. Things that can be manipulated by the mouse or keyboard as entries and display.
If anyone has questions, you can use the email link on the web site mentioned above, and pending health and other pressing issues I will get back to you!
Thanks all ya’ll
Larry, Pahrump

Yup, that’s me… who woulda thought…
From: JRW <wall...@bigpond.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 13, 2022 3:37 PM
To: Larry Mayfield <drm...@mayfco.com>
Subject: Re: [SARA] How to extract useful data from two-element interferometer fringes
Thank you for your reply Larry.
This Radio Astronomy is a very expensive business so from my point of view it is best to fully understand exactly the system before buying components. My response to you is to pose some questions you may ask of the authors.
Re: For one thing this particular design, and I did not come up with it, so don’t shoot the messenger.
Oh no ! Please do not read me wrong. I am merely saying that the author(s) of that block diagram need to or should provide much more detail to understand exactly what's going on. For example those filters are not specified - just 2 numbers (?).
Question: (That needs to be asked) What is the input frequency ? Given that the authors have said in the title "Observational Results with a Ku-band Interferometer" where as Ku Band is centred on 10GHz. in slide 3 the authors mention 10GHz. - well removed from 1.42GHz.
About the Analog to Digital Converter.
Those signals (F1, E, F2 etc) these will need to be suitably band limited before sampled in the ADC - notice, no mention is made of this. As for the bit depth a 10 bit ADC will give a dynamic range (volts) of 30db. High sampling rate(say 20 MSPS) 12 or 14 bit ADC's are very expensive.
Perhaps the bandwidth of the signals from the log amplifiers are quite low say less than 16KHz. in which case a USB sound card (like : Volans VL-UA01) will do the job very well - 2 channels, 16bits , *.wav format etc.
So, from my perspective, I would ask the Authors to provide considerably more detail on their project before I would start buying components and start construction.
Kind Regards,
Jeremy. (VK5WJ).
On 14/02/2022 09:03, Larry Mayfield wrote:
As I mentioned, I am not the sharpest pencil in the pocket protector, however, and so the reason for the questions I asked. I may make a lot of dumb responses here so forgive me?
This is an interferometer first off. So things are done a bit differently I suspect. For one thing this particular design, and I did not come up with it, so don’t shoot the messenger. The feed horn and internals are an LNBF which is an antenna that has its low noise amplifier and the frequency down converter built in. And since in an interferometer one data stream is mixed with the other, each data stream must of some necessity use the same clock rate and phasing. Else when mixed to get the multiplied ( the by the summer) to get the overall signal output to be accurate, they have to be precise and in tune. So the built in local oscillator Xtal is removed and the single source 25 MHZ signal used instead for each feed. Yes, fiddling with it is going to be required to get what I want to do. A couple of the reasons for doing an interferometer are irresolution and increase in sensitivity. And yes, I am limiting this set up to watching and dissecting the Hydrogen line. I do want some bandwidth because of doppler shifts from far away signals and also our local system doppler effects. So, some adjustments will be needed.
As far as I know the filters are to remove unwanted noise and signals from being processed downstream. For me that means getting rid of unwanted signal junk on each side of the pass band that is not wanted and to do it early in the process stream. It also helps to reduce the size of recorded files if any are recorded. From what little I may think I know, the low pass filter and the one called bandpass are used to make a PassBand filtering system. The low pass filter lets all signals up to the cutoff point, defined as a the 3dbm point and go through and what is above that frequency is reduced severely; 0 to 950 Mhz is good and above 950MHZ is eliminated so to speak. The Bandpass filter lets only signal from 656 MHZ pass. The result is a Passband that is essentially letting signals and anything else that’s between 656 MHz and 950 MHz though into the processing area of the circuit. The down converted signal from the LNBF must of certainty fit into the is filter parameter range so tweaking will in all likelihood be required. In my plan I will probably put in a switch selectable bypass around the filters to process the entire signal, if for nothing else, than chuckles.
The job of any ADC is to convert analog signals into digital ones for processing by computers or microcontrollers. The AD8302 recives analog frequency signals and process those as analog outputs. The signals that the Logarithmic rectifiers receive are analog signals as well and the Log rectifiers process thsm into analog signals as well. But the digital processing of the computers and micro processing systems require digital signals from those devices. Or each of their outputs are input ino one of the ADC channels, probably I would use A0, A1, A2, A3 and A4 and them put those out as digital words after sampling the signals. Then those can be further processed and displayed on screen or recorded. My question regards eh ADC were in respect to just how much sampling , ie sample rate is effective and noting that the built in ADC on the Arduino I will use is only a 10 bit unit; that is pretty coarse for really defined signals, but in truth for my system and what I am looking for it might be good enough. I do have a number of ADC units though co I can cobble something together if needed for very fine microvolt resolution.
As for me? I plan on finishing the design work and then building my system. I enjoy the pleasure of that as much as anything I do, lol. Heck, I am an engineer. Not an electronics one, but structural dynamics, aerodynamics, and some others I can’t and won’t admit to, and have fun. I used to be a test wienee so I know how to plan and do things…
For all of you who see mistakes in what I just wrote about above, just ignore it and if you have advice for me, then pass that along, I did and do need information, lol. Criticism, of my capabilities is moot and not needed, I know where I am on the electronics knowledge charts, and that is near the bottom.. no use beating a dead horse…
Larry
Pahrump, NV
From: JRW <wall...@bigpond.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 13, 2022 2:05 AM
To: Larry Mayfield <drm...@mayfco.com>
Subject: Re: [SARA] How to extract useful data from two-element interferometer fringes
Hi Larry,
Before spending too much on this project the diagram in the referenced link needs considerable clarification and explaination.
1. You are talking about an observatory for 1420MHz. But the document title talks about Ku band and this is centred on 15 GHz.
Question: Is the frequency (25MHz. ) of the oscillator correct? Mixing the environment with a 25MHz. source will produce sidebands up and down by only 25 MHz.
Question: What is the centre frequency and bandwidth of the band pass filter and how is related to the 25MHz. local oscillator.
Question: Is the low pass filter really needed ? The BPF should suffice.
Question: In the block diagram the ADC has 4 inputs ??? What is going on here ?
If I were to build this system I would require much more information than is presented in this document. There is too much left out.
Regards,
Jeremy (VK5WJ).
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