Masato Tsuboi, Yutaka Hasegawa, Go Tabuchi, Yasuhiro Murata, Koji Yuchi, Tomoaki Toda, Takashi Uchimura, Kimihiro Kimura, Takashi Kasuga
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan 75(3) 567-583 2023年4月5日 査読有り筆頭著者
We built a Ka-band dual-circular-polarization low-noise receiver for the Misasa 54 m parabola antenna in Misasa, Japan. The antenna is designed to be combined with a transmitter and receiver system at the X band (around 8 GHz) and simultaneously with a receiver system at the Ka band. The Ka band is the frequency band around 30 GHz, which is important for deep-space communications and radio astronomy. The receiver comprises some waveguide components including a feed horn, a circular polarizer, and low-noise amplifiers. The components are installed in a vacuum vessel and are cooled to 4 K with a Gifford-McMahon refrigerator, providing low-noise performance. The receiver is capable of simultaneously handling the left- and right-hand circular-polarization (LHCP and RHCP) channels. The receiver-noise temperature was measured to be T-RX similar or equal to 14 K in both the LHCP and RHCP channels. The system-noise temperature, including the antenna loss and atmospheric attenuation at the zenith, was measured to be T-sys = 36-37 K in both the LHCP and RHCP channels on a clear day in September at Misasa. When the receiver is used with the X-band transmitter, the system-noise temperature is maintained at T-sys similar or equal to 42 K in the RHCP channel. The degradation in the system-noise temperature is attributed to a frequency-selective reflector, which divides the signals in the X and Ka bands. There is no contamination from the transmitter to damage the receiver. The receiver has already been in use for deep-space communications and radio-astronomy observations. Our team in the radio-astronomy laboratory of ISAS/JAXA is responsible for the development of the receiver and the measurements of its performance.
Florian Peißker, Michal Zajaček, Nadeen B. Sabha, Masato Tsuboi, Jihane Moultaka, Lucas Labadie, Andreas Eckart, Vladimír Karas, Lukas Steiniger, Matthias Subroweit, Anjana Suresh, Maria Melamed, Yann Clénet
The Astrophysical Journal 944(2) id.231 2023年2月1日 査読有り
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan psab056 2021年8月4日 査読有り
We present the results based on the 2.5 arcsec-resolution observations using
Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) of the Galactic Center
Molecular Cloud G-0.02-0.07, or the 50 km/s Molecular Cloud (50MC), in the SO
(N_J=2_2-1_1) line and 86-GHz continuum emission, the combination of which is
considered to trace "hot molecular core candidates" (HMCCs) appearing in the
early stage of massive star formation. In the 86-GHz continuum image, we
identified nine dust cores in the central part of the 50MC, in which four
famous compact HII regions are located. No new ultra-compact HII regions were
found. We also identified 28 HMCCs in the 50MC with the SO line. The overall SO
distribution had no clear positional correlation with the identified HII
regions. The HMCCs in the 50MC showed a variety of association and
non-association with dust and Class-I CH3OH maser emissions. The variety
suggests that they are not in a single evolutionary stage or environment.
Nevertheless, the masses of the identified HMCCs were found to be well
approximated by a single power law of their radii, M_LTE/(M_sun)=5.44 x 10^5
(r/(pc))^2.17 at T_ex = 50-100 K. The derived HMCC masses were larger than
those of the molecular cores with the same radii in the 50MC and also than
those of the molecular clumps in the Galactic disk. Additional observations are
needed to confirm the nature of these HMCCs in the 50MC.
Proceedings of the 19th International Symposium on Space Terahertz Technology, ISSTT 2008 267-272 2008年 査読有り
We developed a waveguide-type dual-polarization sideband-separating SIS receiver system of the 100-GHz band for the 45-m radio telescope at the Nobeyama Radio Observatory, Japan. This receiver is composed of an orthomode transducer and two sideband-separating SIS mixers, which are both based on the waveguide technique. The receiver has four intermediate frequency (IF) bands of 4.0--8.0 GHz. Over the radio frequency range of 80--120 GHz, the singlesideband receiver noise temperatures are 50--100 K and the image rejection ratios are greater than 10 dB. The new receiver system was installed in the telescope, and we successfully observed the 12CO, 13CO, C18O and the other emission lines simultaneously toward the Sagittarius B2 region to confirm the performance of the receiver system.
We have performed monitoring observations of the flux density toward the<br />
Galactic center compact radio source, Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), which is a<br />
supermassive black hole, from 1996 to 2005 using the Nobeyama Millimeter Array<br />
of the Nobeyama Radio Observatory, Japan. These monitoring observations of Sgr<br />
A* were carried out in the 3- and 2-mm (100 and 140 GHz) bands, and we have<br />
detected several flares of Sgr A*. We found intraday variation of Sgr A* in the<br />
2000 March flare. The twofold increase timescale is estimated to be about 1.5<br />
hr at 140 GHz. This intraday variability suggests that the physical size of the<br />
flare-emitting region is compact on a scale at or below about 12 AU (~150 Rs;<br />
Schwarzschild radius). On the other hand, clear evidence of long-term periodic<br />
variability was not found from a periodicity analysis of our current millimeter<br />
data set.