ska – the reference design

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SKA – The Reference Design Peter Hall SKA International Project Engineer, ISPO www.skatelescope.org Next-Generation Correlators Workshop Groningen, June 28, 2006

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SKA – The Reference Design. Peter Hall SKA International Project Engineer, ISPO www.skatelescope.org Next-Generation Correlators Workshop Groningen, June 28, 2006. Outline. SKA SKA R eference D esign Selected antenna technology Correlator matters (brief) Project news. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: SKA – The Reference Design

SKA – The Reference Design

Peter HallSKA International Project Engineer, ISPO

www.skatelescope.org

Next-Generation Correlators WorkshopGroningen, June 28, 2006

Page 2: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Outline

SKA SKA Reference Design

– Selected antenna technology – Correlator matters (brief)

Project news

Page 3: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA At A Glance Aperture synthesis radio telescope

with 1 km2 of effective collecting area by 2020

1 km2 ~ 100 x VLA area – Limited gains by reducing receiver noise– Just need more microwave photons!

Frequency range 0.1 - 25 GHz– Large bandwidths (4 GHz), large fields-of-view (50

deg2) New capabilities: area re-use (“multi-

fielding”), RFI mitigation, high dynamic range

imaging, ….

Innovative design to reduce cost– € 1000 per m2 target is about 0.1 current practice

International funding: ~ € 1 billion 17-country international consortium 4 potential sites; ranking in progress

Hugedata rates& volumes

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Page 4: SKA – The Reference Design

2000

Site short-listing

‘1% SKA’Science

ISSCMoAs

ScienceCase

published

Inter-governmental discussions

including site selection

First SKA WorkingGroup

Initial concept

2000

‘10% SKA’Science

92 96 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 14 18 22

Feasibility study

Full arrayBuild

100% SKA

SKAComplete

Phase 1Build

10% SKA

Conceptexposition

Define SKA

System

SKA Timeline

Optimise Design

Reference design selected

Construct 1% SKA Pathfinders

Radio interferometers can be built in stages(Inbuilt risk mitigation)

Page 5: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA: Radio Meets IT (Again)

Is SKA a software telescope? Almost!

Page 6: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Reference Design - Background

Reference Design (RD)– Provides recognizable SKA image– Focuses science and engineering– Forms basis of SKA costing– Is a strong candidate for actual implementation

Result of wide exploration of design space– Original SKA concepts pushed boundaries in key areas: often

simultaneously!» Brightness sensitivity, field-of-view, no. FOVs, frequency coverage,

…» RD retains major precepts in each frequency range» All SKA concepts had/have much common system design

RD balances innovation and risk– Recognizes need to optimize within selected technology mix – Maps out technology contingencies

» Fall-back positions at every decision point

Page 7: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA Reference Design

Page 8: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA Reference Design A sparse aperture array for 0.1 - 0.3 GHz (Low-Band)

– “Era of Recombination” array» Super LOFAR, MWA etc

– Multiple independent FOVs, wide FOVs– Low risk

A small dish + “smart feed” for 0.3 - 25 GHz– Radio camera– Dish ~ 10 m diameter– Smart feed wide response in angle OR frequency

» Mid-Band 0.3 – 3 GHz: wide FOV» High-Band 3+ GHz: wide bandwidth

– Both low risk + high risk components– Driven in part by need for sensitive, wide FOV telescope a.s.a.p (SKA Phase

1)

An innovation path– Radio “fish eye” lens– Dense aperture array for 0.3 – 1 GHz– Independent FOV capability to 1 GHz– All-sky monitoring capability– High risk (but potentially high return)

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Page 9: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

radio “fish-eye lens”

Inner core

Station

Digital radio camera+ stations to3000 km

Radio fish-eye lens

Reference Design

Page 10: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA – Schematically

(About 150 stations)

(About 2000 antennas – all correlated)

Page 11: SKA – The Reference Design
Page 12: SKA – The Reference Design
Page 13: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Reference Design: Some Technology

> 3 GHz: wide-band feed

< 0.3 GHz: sparse aperture array

0.3 – 3 GHz:phased arrayfeed

Innovation path: dense aperture array

Mid-Band

High-Band

Swinburne/CVA visualization

Low-Band

Page 14: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Small Dish + Phased Array Feed

Digital beamformer

Phased array feed

Correlator & further processing

Multiple fields

10 m dish cost target:~ €30k exc. feed

FOV expansion factors ~30 maybe practical

~ D radian

D

Terminology: PAF is one type of Focal Plane Array

Page 15: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

PAF Operation

Key question:

How calibratable arePAFs?

D. Hayman, T. Bird,P. Hall

Page 16: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Reference Design Practicalities Full frequency range unlikely to be affordable

– Possible outcome: (EoR array) + (0.3 – 10 GHz) Dense AA is least mature technology in cost terms

– Balance between AA and SD collecting area will depend on cost and performance demonstration

– AA probably has most scientific value as a central collecting area But SD+PAFs also need rapid demonstration

– Cheap dishes and astronomically-capable PAFs are not trivial– Low frequency efficiency is a potential issue

Ultimate contingency if AA, SD+PAF fail:– Super-LOFAR, 0.1 - 0.3 GHz, plus– “small” dishes (~10 m) + single pixel feed, > 0.3 GHz

» 7 deg2 FOV at 0.7 GHz; “small” FOV partially compensated by better Aeff/Tsys

Large-scale cost – performance estimation begins Q4 ’06– Closely allied with variational analysis wrt science goals– Strawman design for forthcoming Paris meeting

Page 17: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Wide Fields Same FOV same no. of receiver chains

– Concept independent (almost) Many small antennas correlator intensive

– Small dishes or AA patches Fewer, larger antennas with FOV expansion

reduced correlator load– Use focal plane beamforming to reduce order of correlation challenge

» Bigger dishes + PAF (or larger AA patches)» Big question: does extra PAF calibration cost negate correlator saving?

– Bigger antennas» Better low freq performance» More sensitive, easier to calibrate» Better RFI discrimination

– Smaller antennas» Probably more attractive production costing» Easier to calibrate?

Low & mid-band wide-FOV operation fits within processing envelope defined by high band SKA spec.

Page 18: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPOSKA Correlator – Output Data Rate

4000 stations4 polarization products2x16-bit fixed point numbers/complex value 128 MB per visibility set

Integration time 0.1 sec 1000 spectral channels10 station beams 9 TB/sec output data rate

Need special purpose hardware for initial stages of post-correlation processing

Page 19: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA Correlator Attributes Extreme flexibility

– Simultaneous low, medium, high band operation– Complete trade-off of parameters (no. inputs, bandwidths, no. FOVs,

processing accuracy, ….)– Support for “new” science:

» High time resolution imaging, real-time VLBI, ….

Highly scaleable, reliable, maintainable, upgradeable– “Open telescope” ? ; standard data formats/interfaces (accept overheads)

; graceful degradation + hot spares operating model– Minimize NRE over life of telescope maximum re-useability

Station correlators can be modest– E.g. calibration to optimize station beamforming may not require full or

continuous bandwidth coverage Signal connection and routing will be a major issue Power is a major issue (remote sites, minimize op cost)

Line between correlator and other DSP will be blurred Line between DSP engines and computers will be

blurred SKA DSP will likely be a mix of ASIC, FPGA and

computers

Page 20: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA – Many Other Challenges

Low-noise, integrated, receivers– E.g. millions-off for mid-band

High speed data transport– Looking for 100 Gb/s trans-continental and trans-oceanic

Signal processing– beyond just correlation (IM, tied array modes, …)

Post-processing– 2015-2020 computing capacity will limit initial science but

cannot dominate system design– Archive and sharing of data will be a major challenge

Pathfinders and demonstrators are pivotal– Allen Telescope Array, LOFAR, xNTD, Karoo Array

Telescope, DSNA, APERTIF, EMBRACE, 2-PAD ….– €200M committed so far; €80M explicitly for SKA;

additional €40M expected in China shortly

Page 21: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

SKA Engineering Philosophy Strong emphasis on

technology demonstration – Retire risk as early as

possible

Focus on:– Aggressive cost reduction

strategies (e.g. SKADS)– International collaboration

& deliverables– Industry engagement

» Pre-competitive R&D» Paradigm shift to deliver

SKA on required timescales

e.g. SD+PAF Demonstrator - NTD

Page 22: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Current SKA Happenings Site assessment

– RFI and other studies complete; list of “acceptable” or “qualified” sites soon

Funding agencies and SKA– Formed Inter-agency Working Group; continuing engagement

Funding opportunities (e.g. ESFRI) Forthcoming Engineering – Science meeting

– Paris, 4-8 Sept– Emphasis on Reference Design, project costing

International engineering review Q4/07 – Q1/08– Reference Design, specifications, …

Continued science and engineering exposition More outreach

– New animations, telescope model, …. More industry engagement

– Major structural, governance implications More inter-region collaboration

– Easier as technology concepts coalesce

Page 23: SKA – The Reference Design

PJ Hall, June 2006

ISPO

Summary

Site selection in progress Reference Design identified RD technologies being developed via

regional pathfinders– Rapidly increasing inter-region collaboration

Initial SKA system design in progress– Incl. cost and performance modelling– Preliminary engineering reviews 2007-08

Industry interaction increasing SKA Phase 1 - start 2011