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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