VLBA Calibrator Survey 7 (VCS7) observing campaign.


Original text of the proposal in TeX format and in PDF format.

Objectives of the campaign

We request three 24 hour blocks of VLBA observing time for a search of new calibrators in the declination zone [-50°, -25°] that are needed for the southern VLBI network LBA, as well as the ALMA, and the prototype of the SKA at South Africa. This project compliments efforts of the Australian VLBI group for an increase the number of calibrators in the southern hemisphere.

Previous Observations

VLBA Observing programs BB023, BF071, BP110, BP118, BK125, and BP133 were designed to expand the list of calibrator sources suitable for phase referencing, for geodetic observations, and for space navigation. The need for separations of no more than several degrees between the calibrator and target source for successful phase referencing, e.g., [1], requires a list of several thousand calibrator sources. Twenty four VLBA Calibrator observing sessions, each of 24 hours, were made between 1994 and 2007. The results from the above observations were published, [2]. [4], [6], [7], [8], and [9] made available on the Web at
http://www.vlba.nrao.edu/astro/calib,    http://vlbi.gsfc.nasa.gov/astro,    http://vlbi.gsfc.nasa.gov/vcs/. In the web sites, all sources within a specified distance from a selected target position can be found, and images and visibility plots for each potential calibrator can be scrutinized. Owing to VLBA Calibrator Survey observations, the number of calibrators in the pool surpassed 3000 by 2007.

Proposed Observations

However, the number of calibrators in declination zones below -30° drops by a factor of 4 as shown in Figure 1 and table 1. The probability of not finding a calibrator within 3° from the target is only 6% in northern hemisphere, but increases to 25% at the declination zone [-30°, -40°] and 58\% at declinations below -40°.

Table 1. Probability to find a calibrator in the disk of the specified radius at any given direction in various declination zones.

Zone
[-20°, +90°] 70.2% 94.1% 99.5%
[-30°, -20°] 64.6% 90.7% 98.5%
[-40°, -30°] 45.1% 75.1% 91.6%
[-52°, -40°] 21.5% 42.3% 61.2%
[-90°, -52°] 21.3% 41.4% 61.1%

Figure 1. Calibrator source density per steradian as a function in various declination zones.

There is a need to extend the pool of calibrators further to the southern hemisphere:

  1. VLBI observations with the southern VLBI network LBA need calibrators for phase-referencing observations of weak sources. One of the important applications will be follow-up observations of γ-ray sources that will be detected with the GLAST mission. Many of them will be weak at radio frequencies and will require a nearby phase calibrator for detection.
  2. ALMA, as well as the SKA precursors in Australia and South Africa, needs 50--100 strong compact calibrators over the sky. These primary calibrators will be used for determination of ALMA antenna positions. These primary calibrators will be used for the determination of ALMA antenna positions (and similar astrometric calibrations for SKA) to the specified accuracy. the positional accuracy needed for the calibrators is about 1-mas level.
  3. Since it is difficult to predict which sources observed at S/X band will be sufficiently bright or compact 300 GHz, the frequency that ALMA to be used for most accurate astrometric observations, or at < 1.6 GHz for the SKA, the number of candidate primary calibrators found at S/X band should be at least 200.
  4. ALMA and SKA will need several thousands secondary calibrator sources for the separation of a target to a secondary calibrator to be less than 2—3°. The grid of secondary calibrator will be also used for differential astrometry,and their positions should be known with accuracy better of a few mas in order to obtain accurate absolute positions and to remove contribution of second order phase effects. Thus, the position of these secondary calibrators must be accurately tied to the global set of primary calibrators already cataloged.
Recognizing these challenges, a program for a search of calibrators with the LBA in the declination zone [-90°, -50°] has been submitted to the LBA, and the first experiment is scheduled at 2008.02.05 (Refert to more details
here. Since the LBA currently observes only 20 days per year, extension of the calibrator search with the LBA to declinations above -50° is problematic, because it would take a disproportionally large share of resources. In order to match these efforts, we propose to observe candidate flat-spectrum sources in the declination zone [-50°, -25°] with the VLBA. This will require to observe at low elevation angles, down to 5°. We will use the same elevation angle limit as in routine geodetic experiments. The declination accuracy will be relatively poor, but the compactness of the source should be well determined. The list of 500 bright flat spectrum candidate sources is selected on the basis of the preliminary version of the AT20G catalogue.

Technical details

Observations should be done in three 24 hour runs, as is usually done for absolute astrometry observations, in order to minimize systematic errors. We propose to observe in the same manner as previously, dual S/X band with wide spanned bandwidth, two scans of 3 minutes long per source and 10 minute bursts of troposphere calibrators over the sky every 1.5--2 hours. Since the entire array will not see low declination sources, different source will be observed at sub-arrays, as it usually done in geodesy mode. Southern stations MK, SC, KP, FD, and PT will observe sources with declinations below -40°, while northern stations at the same time will observe sources with declinations above -40°. The third 24 run will be scheduled after preliminary results of first two runs will be known. That run will focus on re-observing sources that were missed due to failures, bad weather, etc., and on observing sources in the declination zone [-25°, -35°]. We request 256 Mbps recording rate because we have to observe at low elevation angles that limits integration time. From the other hand, we need to reach the baseline SNR at least 20 in order to determine source coordinates with milliarcsec accuracy at a limited number of antennas. Considering that the VLBA at S/X has sensitivity of 4--5 mJy for 3 minutes of integration time at 256 Mbps at low elevations, this allows us to observe sources with the expected correlated flux density at a level of 100 mJy. The calibration and imaging will be made by using packages AIPS and DIFMAP. We do not expect maps to be of great quality due to a very poor uv-coverage, but properly calibrated visibilities will provide valuable estimates of correlated flux densities that are needed for scheduling phase calibrator observations. Positions will be determined with Calc/Solve. Both, positions and maps in FITS format, will be included in the VLBA Calibrator list and become available on the Web to the community within 30 days upon completion of correlation. Based on our experience of analyzing low elevation data, we expect the position accuracy of 2--5 mas, a factor of 2 worse than in previous VCS observations.

People

Team members (in alphabetic order):

List of candidate sources

To be decided.

Current status

The propossal to the VLBA oobserving programme committee was submitted on 2008.01.31. It was assigned code BP149.

References

  1. Beasley, A.J., Very Long Baseline Interferometry and the VLBA, 1995 ASPCS, 82, 327
  2. Beasley, A.J., Gordon, D., Peck, A.B., Petrov, L., MacMillan, D.S., Fomalont, E.B., and Ma, C. 2002, APSJ, 141, 13, astro-ph/0201414
  3. Browne I.W.A., Patnaik A.R., Wilkinson P.N., Wrobel J.M. MNRAS, 293, 257, 1998.
  4. Fomalont, E.B., Petrov, L., MacMillan, D.S., Gordon, D., and Ma, C., 2003, AJ, 126 (N5), 2562, 2003.
  5. Patnaik A.R., Browne I.W.A., Wilkinson P.N., Wrobel J.M. MNRAS, 254, 655, 1992.
  6. Petrov, L, Kovalev, Y.Y., Fomalont E., Gordon D., AJ, 129, 1163, 2005. astro-ph/0409698
  7. Petrov, L, Kovalev, Y.Y., Fomalont E., Gordon D., AJ, 131, 1872, 2006. astro-ph/0508506
  8. Kovalev, Yu.Y., Petrov, L., Fomalont, E., and Gordon, D., AJ, 133, 1236, 2007. astro-ph/0607524
  9. Petrov, L, Kovalev, Y.Y., Fomalont E., Gordon D., Submitted to AJ http://arXiv.org/abs/0801.3895
  10. Wilkinson P.N., Browne I.W.A., Patnaik A.R., Wrobel J.M., Sorathia B., MNRAS, 300, 790, 1999.

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