Research news on Aperture synthesis

Aperture synthesis is a research area in observational astronomy and imaging science that develops and applies methods to synthesize a large effective aperture by coherently combining signals from multiple separated telescopes or antenna elements. Using the van Cittert–Zernike theorem and Fourier transform relationships between measured complex visibilities and sky brightness distributions, aperture synthesis enables high-angular-resolution imaging far exceeding that of individual apertures. The field encompasses interferometric array design, baseline configuration optimization, calibration of instrumental and atmospheric phase errors, deconvolution and image reconstruction algorithms, and extension to broadband, polarization-sensitive, and very long baseline interferometry for radio, (sub)millimeter, and optical/infrared regimes.

Major new telescope on Chilean summit opens window on universe

Thirty-four years after Cornell University scientists first conceived it, the Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope (FYST) now rises above the Atacama Desert, near the summit of Cerro Chajnantor in Chile. FYST will help answer ...