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Autores principales: Men, Yunpeng, Barr, Ewan, Bansod, Amit, Chen, Weiwei, Wu, Jason, Antoniadis, John, Behrend, Jan, Esser, Niclas, Polch, Oliver, Wieching, Gundolf, Winchen, Tobias
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.19386
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author Men, Yunpeng
Barr, Ewan
Bansod, Amit
Chen, Weiwei
Wu, Jason
Antoniadis, John
Behrend, Jan
Esser, Niclas
Polch, Oliver
Wieching, Gundolf
Winchen, Tobias
author_facet Men, Yunpeng
Barr, Ewan
Bansod, Amit
Chen, Weiwei
Wu, Jason
Antoniadis, John
Behrend, Jan
Esser, Niclas
Polch, Oliver
Wieching, Gundolf
Winchen, Tobias
contents Radio interferometers provide the means to perform the wide-field-of-view (FoV), high-sensitivity observations required for modern radio surveys. As computing power per cost has decreased, there has been a move towards larger arrays of smaller dishes, such as DSA-2000, the upcoming HIRAX, CHORD and SKA radio telescopes. Such arrays can have simpler receiver designs with room-temperature low-noise amplifiers and direct sampling to achieve, greatly reducing the cost per antenna. The ARGOS project is currently developing an array of five 6-meter antennas that will be used to demonstrate the technology required for a next generation "small-D, big-N" radio interferometer in Europe. In this work, our objective was to implement a first-stage digital signal processing system for the ARGOS demonstrator array, providing digitization, channelization, delay correction and frequency-dependent complex gain correction. The system is intended to produce delay and phase corrected dual-polarization channelized voltages in the frequency range 1-3 GHz with a nominal channel bandwidth of 1 MHz. We use an RFSoC 4x2 evaluation board with four analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) that can simultaneously sample two 1 GHz, dual-polarization bands. We use Xilinx Vitis HLS C++ to develop the required firmware as a set of customizable modules suitable for rapid prototyping. We performed hardware verification of the channel response of the critically sampled PFB and of the delay correction, showing both to be consistent with theoretical expectations. Furthermore, the board was installed at the Effelsberg 100-meter radio telescope where we performed commensal pulsar observations with the Effelsberg Direct Digitization backend, showing comparable performance. This work demonstrates the utility of high-level synthesis (HLS) languages in the development of high performance radio astronomy processing backends.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_19386
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle An RFSoC-based F-engine for ARGOS
Men, Yunpeng
Barr, Ewan
Bansod, Amit
Chen, Weiwei
Wu, Jason
Antoniadis, John
Behrend, Jan
Esser, Niclas
Polch, Oliver
Wieching, Gundolf
Winchen, Tobias
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Radio interferometers provide the means to perform the wide-field-of-view (FoV), high-sensitivity observations required for modern radio surveys. As computing power per cost has decreased, there has been a move towards larger arrays of smaller dishes, such as DSA-2000, the upcoming HIRAX, CHORD and SKA radio telescopes. Such arrays can have simpler receiver designs with room-temperature low-noise amplifiers and direct sampling to achieve, greatly reducing the cost per antenna. The ARGOS project is currently developing an array of five 6-meter antennas that will be used to demonstrate the technology required for a next generation "small-D, big-N" radio interferometer in Europe. In this work, our objective was to implement a first-stage digital signal processing system for the ARGOS demonstrator array, providing digitization, channelization, delay correction and frequency-dependent complex gain correction. The system is intended to produce delay and phase corrected dual-polarization channelized voltages in the frequency range 1-3 GHz with a nominal channel bandwidth of 1 MHz. We use an RFSoC 4x2 evaluation board with four analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) that can simultaneously sample two 1 GHz, dual-polarization bands. We use Xilinx Vitis HLS C++ to develop the required firmware as a set of customizable modules suitable for rapid prototyping. We performed hardware verification of the channel response of the critically sampled PFB and of the delay correction, showing both to be consistent with theoretical expectations. Furthermore, the board was installed at the Effelsberg 100-meter radio telescope where we performed commensal pulsar observations with the Effelsberg Direct Digitization backend, showing comparable performance. This work demonstrates the utility of high-level synthesis (HLS) languages in the development of high performance radio astronomy processing backends.
title An RFSoC-based F-engine for ARGOS
topic Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.19386