Laboratory demonstration of the local oscillator concept for the Event Horizon Imager [IMA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2106.12316


Black hole imaging challenges the 3rd generation space VLBI, the Very Long Baseline Interferometry, to operate on a 500 GHz band. The coherent integration timescale needed here is of 450 s though the available space oscillators cannot offer more than 10 s. Self-calibration methods might solve this issue in an interferometer formed by 3 antenna/satellite system, but the need in the 3rd satellite increases mission costs. A frequency transfer is of special interest to alleviate both performance and cost issues. A concept of 2-way optical frequency transfer is examined to investigate its suitability to enable space-to-space interferometry, in particular, to image the ‘shadows’ of black holes from space. The concept, promising on paper, has been demonstrated by tests. The laboratory test set-up is presented and the verification of the temporal stability using standard analysis tool as TimePod is given. The resulting Allan Deviation is dominated by the 1/$\tau$ phase noise trend since the frequency transfer timescale of interest is shorter than 0.2 s. This trend continues into longer integration times, as proven by the longest tests spanning over a few hours. The Allan Deviation between derived 103.2 GHz oscillators is $1.1\times10^{-14}/\tau$ within 10 ms < $\tau$ < 1,000 s that degrades twice towards the longest delay 0.2 s. The worst case satisfies the requirement with a margin of an order of magnitude. The obtained coherence in range of 0.997-0.9998 is beneficial for space VLBI at 557 GHz. The result is of special interest to future science missions for black hole imaging from space.

Read this paper on arXiv…

V. Kudriashov, M. Martin-Neira, E. Lia, et. al.
Thu, 24 Jun 21
21/54

Comments: 17 pages, 14 figures, accepted by JAI