English

The Fast Fourier Transform Telescope

Astrophysics 2009-10-29 v2 High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

We propose an all-digital telescope for 21 cm tomography, which combines key advantages of both single dishes and interferometers. The electric field is digitized by antennas on a rectangular grid, after which a series of Fast Fourier Transforms recovers simultaneous multifrequency images of up to half the sky. Thanks to Moore's law, the bandwidth up to which this is feasible has now reached about 1 GHz, and will likely continue doubling every couple of years. The main advantages over a single dish telescope are cost and orders of magnitude larger field-of-view, translating into dramatically better sensitivity for large-area surveys. The key advantages over traditional interferometers are cost (the correlator computational cost for an N-element array scales as N log N rather than N^2) and a compact synthesized beam. We argue that 21 cm tomography could be an ideal first application of a very large Fast Fourier Transform Telescope, which would provide both massive sensitivity improvements per dollar and mitigate the off-beam point source foreground problem with its clean beam. Another potentially interesting application is cosmic microwave background polarization.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0805.4414,
  title  = {The Fast Fourier Transform Telescope},
  author = {Max Tegmark and Matias Zaldarriaga},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0805.4414},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

Replaced to match accepted PRD version. 21 pages, 9 figs

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:45:05.899Z