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Measuring the global 21-cm signal with the MWA-II: improved characterisation of lunar-reflected radio frequency interference

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2023

Himanshu Tiwari*
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley, Perth, Western Australia, 6102 Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Space & Astronomy, P. O. Box 1130, Bentley, WA 6102, Australia
Benjamin McKinley
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley, Perth, Western Australia, 6102 ARC Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics in Three Dimensions (ASTRO-3D), Australia
Cathryn M. Trott
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), Curtin University, Kent Street, Bentley, Perth, Western Australia, 6102 ARC Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics in Three Dimensions (ASTRO-3D), Australia
Nithyanandan Thyagarajan
Affiliation:
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Space & Astronomy, P. O. Box 1130, Bentley, WA 6102, Australia
*
Corresponding author: Himanshu Tiwari; Email: himanshu.tiwari@postgrad.curtin.edu.au.
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Abstract

Radio interferometers can potentially detect the sky-averaged signal from the Cosmic Dawn (CD) and the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR) by studying the Moon as a thermal block to the foreground sky. The first step is to mitigate the Earth-based radio frequency interference (RFI) reflections (Earthshine) from the Moon, which significantly contaminate the FM band $\approx 88-110$ MHz, crucial to CD-EoR science. We analysed Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) phase I data from 72 to 180 MHz at 40 kHz resolution to understand the nature of Earthshine over three observing nights. We took two approaches to correct the Earthshine component from the Moon. In the first method, we mitigated the Earthshine using the flux density of the two components from the data, while in the second method, we used simulated flux density based on an FM catalogue to mitigate the Earthshine. Using these methods, we were able to recover the expected Galactic foreground temperature of the patch of sky obscured by the Moon. We performed a joint analysis of the Galactic foregrounds and the Moon’s intrinsic temperature $(T_{\mathrm{Moon}})$ while assuming that the Moon has a constant thermal temperature throughout three epochs. We found $T_{\mathrm{Moon}}$ to be at $184.4\pm{2.6}\,\mathrm{K}$ and $173.8\pm{2.5}\,\mathrm{K}$ using the first and the second methods, respectively, and the best-fit values of the Galactic spectral index $(\alpha)$ to be within the 5% uncertainty level when compared with the global sky models. Compared with our previous work, these results improved constraints on the Galactic spectral index and the Moon’s intrinsic temperature. We also simulated the Earthshine at MWA between November and December 2023 to find suitable observing times less affected by the Earthshine. Such observing windows act as Earthshine avoidance and can be used to perform future global CD-EoR experiments using the Moon with the MWA.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Astronomical Society of Australia
Figure 0

Table 1. ON-Moon and OFF-Moon observation details.

Figure 1

Figure 1. {Top panel} Left: Difference image of the ON-OFF observation, Right: The reconstructed model of the quasi-specular Earthshine component obtained by multiplying $s_{\mathrm{spec}}$ with quasi-specular mask [B]. {Bottom panel}, Left: The reconstructed disk of the Moon is obtained by operating the PSF [P] to the disk mask [M], Right: The residual image, obtained by subtracting the reconstructed disk and specular Earthshine components from the difference image. The shown images are the average of all components from the second observational Epoch (Sept. 2015) at the middle of the FM band $(\approx \nu_0=100\, \mathrm{MHz})$

Figure 2

Figure 2. The locations of FM stations considered for the reflected RFI estimation during the ON-Moon observation. The figure represents a single snapshot in the middle of the second observation epoch (Sept. 2015). The colourbar represents the transmitting power of the stations in kW. The figure represents all the stations from where the Moon is above the horizon at the time of ON-Moon MWA observation.

Figure 3

Figure 3. The variation of FM station count during the ON-Moon observations made on all three Epochs ($30^{\mathrm{th}}$ August, $26^{\mathrm{th}}$ September and $21^{\mathrm{st}}$ December 2015). It can be seen that the station counts change significantly on all three epochs during the observation. The data points are generated every $\approx 230$ s to match the observation time.

Figure 4

Figure 4. The observed flux density of the disk component in the top panel and the quasi-specular Earthshine component in the middle panel. The bottom panel shows the flux density of the Moon after performing the Earthshine mitigation using two methods. The blue errorbars correspond to the Earthshine mitigation of the first kind, where we used the fitted value of $S_{\mathrm{diffuse}}(\nu)$ at $\nu_0$ to determine $S_{m}(\nu)$. The line fitted to the disk component is shown with yellow dashes in the top panel. The second method is shown by the pink errorbars, where the simulated value of $S_{\mathrm{diffuse}}(\nu)$ at $\nu_0$ is used to estimate $S_{m}(\nu)$. The data points are at 40 kHz fine channels and averaged over 12 full-band MWA observations from the first epoch. The corresponding errors are obtained using the inverse variance-weighted scheme. The black vertical dashed line is at 150 MHz, which corresponds to the frequency where the Moon first appears in emission.

Figure 5

Figure 5. The mean flux density of the data and simulation in the FM band at the first observing epoch.

Figure 6

Table 2. p-values from the T-test at the middle of the FM band $\approx \nu_0$.

Figure 7

Table 3. Showing the fitted values of the $T_{\mathrm{refl-Gal150}}$ and reflected Galactic spectral index $\beta$.

Figure 8

Figure 6. Galactic temperature from the GSM2016 model at the middle of the second epoch. The left panel shows the occulted sky temperature $T_{\mathrm{Gal150}}$ as observed from the MWA. The single dot represents the location of the Moon during the ON-Moon observation. The right panel shows the sky temperature reflected by the Moon $T_{\mathrm{refl-Gal}}$. To make the pixels visible on the left figure, we doubled the pixel counts of the Moon and saturated the colourbar by using the same colour scale as the right figure.

Figure 9

Figure 7. Mean reflected Galactic temperature estimated using GSM2016 (Zheng et al., 2017) at all three epochs. The reflected Galactic temperature (shown by point, triangle, and diamond markers) is fitted with the power law Equation (9). It can be seen that the reflected Galactic temperature at 150 MHz $(T_{\mathrm{refl-Gal150}})$ does not change significantly between the epochs. The error bars corresponding to $T_{\mathrm{refl-Gal150}}$ represent the 5% model estimation error of GSM2016 (Zheng et al., 2017), and the uncertainty in the $\beta$ represents the fitting error.

Figure 10

Table 4. Table showing the best-fit parameters from the joint fitting of the combined epochs.

Figure 11

Figure 8. Occulted sky temperature from the dataset from the first epoch. The data points shown by light blue and light pink represent the occulted sky temperature obtained using the two Earthshine mitigation methods. The data points fitted with $T_{\mathrm{Gal}}(\nu)$, are shown by the dashed lines (black and pink) for the respective methods. The quoted values of the $T_{\mathrm{Gal150;\, Fitting}}$, $\alpha_{\mathrm{Fitting}}$ and $T_{\mathrm{Moon}}$ are obtained by taking the inverse variance-weighted mean and variance. For comparison, different GSM sky models are plotted over the data points. The model uncertainty in the Galactic temperature and spectral index of GSM2016 are shown in the blue text in the figure.

Figure 12

Figure 9. The data points from the three observational epochs are shown with different colour schemes (light blue, light grey, light pink). The black dashed line corresponds to the best fit to the occulted sky temperature from the first epoch (August 2015) and is plotted along with the blue errorbars of the GSM2016. The data points and fitted values are the estimates obtained using the first method of Earthshine mitigation.

Figure 13

Figure 10. Occulted sky temperature measured using the second method of Earthshine mitigation (FM simulation). Data points from all three epochs are presented with coloured errorbars. The best fit to the first epoch (August 2015) dataset is plotted with the black dashed line, and the corresponding values of the GSM2016 model are plotted with the blue errorbars.

Figure 14

Table 5. Correlation between the parameters of Equation (11) when fitted with the dataset from the first epoch using the first Earthshine mitigation method.

Figure 15

Table 6. The correlation between the parameter of Equation (11) when fitted jointly with combined datasets from all three epochs.

Figure 16

Figure 11. Measurement of the $T_{\mathrm{Moon}}$ from our analysis along with the McKinley et al. (2018) result and Table 2 from Krotikov and Troitskiĭ (1964). The values of $T_{\mathrm{Moon}}$ from this work are presented as points at 150 MHz.

Figure 17

Table 7. Table showing the best-fit parameters from all sky models for every individual case.

Figure 18

Table 8. Above: Joint-fit estimates of $T_{\mathrm{Moon}}$ from all sky models. Below: GSM2016 model fit estimates for removed FM band.

Figure 19

Figure 12. Simulation of the station counts between November and December 2023. The variation of station counts roughly repeats over a month. The individual spikes in the plot correspond to a single night’s observation between 20:00-4:30 hrs, with a time separation of 30 mins. The zoomed figure on the top right shows the variation of station counts over a single night from 13th December 2023.

Figure 20

Figure 13. Reflected FM flux density at three different time stamps during the second observing epoch.

Figure 21

Figure 14. T-test results on the first epoch datasets. X-axis shows the FM frequency band, and the Y-axis shows the corresponding p-values. The horizontal line is at p = 0.05, above which the null hypothesis is considered to be accepted. The data points shown in blue colour show the accepted, and the grey colour show rejected frequency channels. The p–value at ≈ ν0 is shown with lime colour.