Radio-Frequency Interference at the McGill Arctic Research Station

11 Dec 2020  ·  T. Dyson, H. C. Chiang, E. Egan, N. Ghazi, T. Menard, R. A. Monsalve, T. Moso, J. Peterson, J. L. Sievers, S. Tartakovsky ·

The frequencies of interest for redshifted 21 cm observations are heavily affected by terrestrial radio-frequency interference (RFI). We identify the McGill Arctic Research Station (MARS) as a new RFI-quiet site and report its RFI occupancy using 122 hours of data taken with a prototype antenna station developed for the Array of Long-Baseline Antennas for Taking Radio Observations from the Sub-Antarctic. Using an RFI flagging process tailored to the MARS data, we find an overall RFI occupancy of 1.8% averaged over 20-125 MHz. In particular, the FM broadcast band (88-108 MHz) is found to have an RFI occupancy of at most 1.6%. The data were taken during the Arctic summer, when degraded ionospheric conditions and an active research base contributed to increased RFI. The results quoted here therefore represent the maximum-level RFI environment at MARS.

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Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics