Searching for Transient Pulses with the ETA Radio Telescope

  • Authors:
  • C. D. Patterson;S. W. Ellingson;B. S. Martin;K. Deshpande;J. H. Simonetti;M. Kavic;S. E. Cutchin

  • Affiliations:
  • Virginia Tech;Virginia Tech;Virginia Tech;Virginia Tech;Virginia Tech;Virginia Tech;Virginia Tech

  • Venue:
  • ACM Transactions on Reconfigurable Technology and Systems (TRETS)
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

Array-based, direct-sampling radio telescopes have computational and communication requirements unsuited to conventional computer and cluster architectures. Synchronization must be strictly maintained across a large number of parallel data streams, from A/D conversion, through operations such as beamforming, to dataset recording. FPGAs supporting multigigabit serial I/O are ideally suited to this application. We describe a recently-constructed radio telescope called ETA having all-sky observing capability for detecting low frequency pulses from transient events such as gamma ray bursts and primordial black hole explosions. Signals from 24 dipole antennas are processed by a tiered arrangement of 28 commercial FPGA boards and 4 PCs with FPGA-based data acquisition cards, connected with custom I/O adapter boards supporting InfiniBand and LVDS physical links. ETA is designed for unattended operation, allowing configuration and recording to be controlled remotely.