
Introduction

Radio Telescopes

Stars - Birth and Death

Pulsars

Aperture Synthesis with Light

Galaxies and Quasars

Cosmology

About the Telescopes
AMI

CAT

CLFST

COAST

Ryle

VSA

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Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory
The Cosmic Anisotropy Telescope (CAT)
The Cosmic Anisotropy Telescope (CAT), built in the mid 1990s,
was the first interferometer
to measure fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Its
first results, published in 1996, were the highest resultion CMB
detection at that time, and showed that the rise in fluctuation power
towards scales of ~1 degree (l ~ 200) measured by the Saskatoon
experiment were matched by a decline in power at smaller angles (l =
500-700), thus showing the existence of the long-predicted acoustic
peak in the CMB power spectrum. Further results were published in
1999.
The CAT was the forerunner to the VSA, establishing and testing some of the principal
design features for that more ambitious project.
It was a three-element interferometer which operated frequencies
between 13 and 17 GHz with an observing bandwidth of 500 MHz and a system
temperature of 50 K. The baselines were variable from 1 to 5 m and for cosmic
microwave background radiation (CMBR) observations a synthesised beam of
approximately 1/2 degree was used. The antennas had a diameter of 70 cm and the
primary beam had a FWHM of 2 degrees at 15 GHz. All three antennas were mounted
on a single turntable which tracked in azimuth, and had a separate elevation
drive. The CAT simultaneously recorded data from orthogonal linear
polarisations. Its alt-az mount meant that the plane of polarisation rotated on
the sky as the telescope tracked a given field. The telescope is surrounded by
a 5-m high earth bank lined with aluminium to form a ground shield. This
shielding reduced the effect of spillover and terrestrial radio interference,
but also limited observations to elevations greater than 30 degrees.
The telescope was turned off and partly dismantled in 2000.
The Cosmic Anisotropy Telescope at the Lord's Bridge Observatory,
Cambridge. The three horn-reflector antennas track in elevation while the
turntable rotates in azimuth, allowing the telescope to point anywhere in the
sky. The turntable sits inside a circular earth bank lined with metal
sheeting. This protects the telescope from radio interference and prevents
it from seeing the ground (which is a relatively strong source of radio
waves). (© Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory, 1996.)
For information on other MRAO telescopes, follow the links on the left.
Last modified: October 2008
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