ITU-R REPORT RA 2126-2007 Techniques for mitigation of radio frequency interference in radio astronomy《在射电天文学中缓解无线电频率干扰的技术》.pdf
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1、 Rep. ITU-R RA.2126 1 REPORT ITU-R RA.2126 Techniques for mitigation of radio frequency interference in radio astronomy (Question ITU-R 237/7) (2007) 1 Introduction This Report aims to provide a concise technical summary of the current state-of-the-art in techniques for the mitigation of radio frequ
2、ency interference (RFI) in radio astronomy. Specifically, this report considers techniques for the mitigation of man-made interference that originates from outside the instrument and is therefore beyond the control of the instrument operator. For the purposes of this report, the criterion for classi
3、fication of a signal as RFI is simply that it is an unwanted but detectable portion of a desired observation that has the potential to either degrade or inhibit the successful conduct of the observation. Some interference is not easily detectable but can still degrade the observations. Its mitigatio
4、n is much more difficult. The aim of mitigation techniques is to permit observation at the levels of sensitivity specified in Recommendation ITU-R RA.769, with percentage of data loss within the limits specified in Recommendation ITU-R RA.1513. These Recommendations provide the conditions for effici
5、ent observing in radio astronomy, and provide the numerical basis for calculation of tolerable RFI conditions in sharing and compatibility studies. Mitigation methods other than simple excision of RFI-contaminated data are not widely used in radio astronomy, mainly because they are not easy to devis
6、e or perform and may require the development of extensive special software. Until recently, the standard observing modes and signal processing techniques used in the course of making observations provided an inherent degree of interference mitigation that proved adequate to provide useful astronomic
7、al data in the presence of some interference. For example, “fringe stopping” in aperture synthesis imaging has the tendency to decorrelate the RFI received at widely-separated antennas, which tends to suppress the RFI in the associated correlation products Thompson, 1982. In the case of some synthes
8、is radio telescopes, such interference may result in a spurious bright source appearing in the maps at the celestial pole, making high declination observations difficult or impossible. Pulsars produce pulses of broadband noise, so a significant receiver bandwidth is needed to achieve a useful signal
9、-to-noise ratio. The noise making up the pulses is subject to frequency-dependent dispersion as it propagates through the rarefied plasmas in the interstellar medium. When observing a pulsar with a radio telescope, the pulse is deliberately de-dispersed using a combination of hardware and software,
10、to recover an accurate (non-dispersed) representation of the intrinsic pulse profile. This process tends to reduce RFI, because the process of de-dispersing the pulsar signal consequently disperses the RFI. Only limited mitigation is provided by these processes. Data are always degraded when interfe
11、rence is present. Increasingly astronomers find that the strength and temporal/spectral density of RFI is such that observations are “saturated” by RFI and made useless. Perhaps the most vulnerable observations are those made with single-dish radio telescopes (continuum or spectroscopy), because the
12、 improvement in sensitivity to astronomical signals afforded by increasing integration time leads to a proportional increase in sensitivity to RFI signals. While certain observing modes offer some intrinsic robustness to low levels of RFI, the low 2 Rep. ITU-R RA.2126 received signal strengths of co
13、smic radio emissions make radio astronomy highly vulnerable to interference. The impact of RFI extends beyond simply preventing or degrading certain observations or types of observation. It also limits the overall productivity of the radio astronomy station, making desirable observations prohibitive
14、ly difficult or expensive in terms of observing time requirements, processing complexity and operational overheads. An example is the increasing need for manual post-observation editing of data to remove RFI, as is sometimes practiced in aperture synthesis imaging Lane et al., 2005. While quite effe
15、ctive, it is difficult to automate and therefore becomes extraordinarily tedious as the observation length and observed bandwidth increase. The presence of RFI sometimes translates into dramatically increased requirements for both labour and telescope time, which is as limiting to science as is RFI
16、that irretrievably obliterates the emission being observed. These issues have motivated research into techniques for mitigation of RFI that might be considered “automatic” or “real time” in the sense that any given technique is nominally an integral part of the instrument, and operates without human
17、 intervention. This is the context in which the techniques described in the following section are presented. 2 Techniques for mitigating RFI The study of techniques for mitigating RFI contaminating the analog output of radio telescope receivers has been a topic of heightened interest in recent years
18、, spurred on by technological advances that enable real-time signal processing approaches to RFI mitigation. A helpful introduction to this area is provided in summaries of recent conferences addressing the issue; see for example Bell et al., 2000 and Ellingson, 2005. For the purposes of this Report
19、, a concise taxonomy of mitigation techniques might be organized as follows: 1. Excision, in the sense of “cutting out” RFI. For example, RFI consisting of brief pulses might be mitigated by blanking the data when the pulse is present; this is temporal excision. Alternately, persistent RFI might be
20、mitigated using array beam-forming techniques to orient pattern nulls in the directions from which the RFI is incident; this is spatial excision. A common property of all excision techniques is some loss of astronomy data, the possible distortion of the remaining data due to artefacts introduced by
21、the excision process. Since blanking is essentially a loss in observing time, there is a concomitant increase in the observing time required to reach the required sensitivity or measurement accuracy. 2. Cancellation, in the sense of “subtracting” RFI from the telescope output. Cancellation is potent
22、ially superior to excision in the sense that the RFI is removed with no impact on the astronomy, nominally providing a “look through” capability that is nominally free of the artefacts associated with the simple “cutting out” of data. However, as discussed below, the tradeoff with respect to excisio
23、n is usually that suppression is limited by the estimate of the interference received by the radio telescope. 3. Anti-coincidence, broadly meaning discrimination of RFI by exploiting the fact that widely-separated antennas should perceive astronomical signals identically, but RFI differently. In suc
24、h instances the RFI makes a contribution to the background noise level at each antenna rather than to the correlated signals. This degrades the correlated signal received, which may require an increase in the observing time to achieve the signal to noise ratio needed. Mitigation methods that are fre
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