The Capella Program: Toward A Space-only High-frequency Radio VLBI Network Formed by Small Satellites in Low Earth Orbits
Abstract
Very long baseline radio interferometry (VLBI) with ground-based observatories is limited by the size of Earth, the geographic distribution of antennas, and the transparency of the atmosphere. In this whitepaper, we present a design for a space-to-space VLBI program composed of two missions: Mimosa, a pathfinder, and Capella, a science-grade VLBI observatory. Mimosa is a two-element space-to-space radio interferometer composed of two small (250 kg) satellites on co-planar polar circular low Earth orbits. Using single-band, single-circular polarization heterodyne HEMT receivers operating at frequencies around 100 GHz, the interferometer is able to achieve a near-perfect visibility plane coverage and an angular resolution of approximately 35 microarcsec. Capella comprises four small (500 kg) satellites in two orthogonal polar low-Earth orbit planes. With single-band heterodyne receivers operating at frequencies around 690 GHz, the interferometer is able to achieve angular resolutions of approximately 7 microarcsec. Within a total observing time of three days, a near-complete uv plane coverage can be reached. The technology for all key components required - radio telescope, receiver, sampler, recorder, frequency standard, positioning system, data downlink, and pointing control system - is already available, partially off-the-shelf. Capella will be able to address a range of science cases, including: the shadows of supermassive black holes; the acceleration and collimation zones of plasma jets emitted from the vicinity of supermassive black holes; the chemical composition of accretion flows into active galactic nuclei through observations of molecular absorption lines; mapping supermassive binary black holes; the magnetic activity of stars; and nova eruptions of symbiotic binary stars -- and, like any substantially new observing technique, has the potential for unexpected discoveries.
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