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Issue A&A
Volume 454, Number 2, August I 2006
APEX Special Booklet
Page(s) L29 - L32
Section Letters
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20065415



A&A 454, L29-L32 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20065415

Letter

The APEX digital Fast Fourier Transform Spectrometer

B. Klein, S. D. Philipp, I. Krämer, C. Kasemann, R. Güsten and K. M. Menten

Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie (MPIfR), Auf dem Hügel 69, 53121 Bonn, Germany
    e-mail: [bklein;sphilipp;kraemer;kasemann;rguesten;kmenten]@MPIfR-Bonn.MPG.de

(Received 11 April 2006 / Accepted 27 April 2006)

Abstract
Context. We present the technology and first scientific results of a new generation of very flexible and sensitive spectrometers, well-suited for the needs of spectral-line radio and (sub)millimeter astronomy: Fast Fourier Transform Spectrometers (FFTS), which are in operation at the Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment (APEX) telescope.
Aims. The FFTS for APEX is a novel high-resolution $2\times 1$ GHz bandwidth digital spectrometer backend. Due to its high frequency resolution, and the demonstrated capability of operating at high altitude, the FFTS became the facility spectrometer for spectral line observations at APEX.
Methods. The FFTS is based on one of the currently most powerful digitizer/analyzer boards available from Acqiris, Switzerland. The board incorporates two 1 Gsamples/s analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) with 8-bit resolution which feed an on-board complex field programmable gate array (FPGA) chip. The enormous processing power by today's FPGAs allow for a complete real-time FFT signal processing pipeline to decompose a 1 GHz band into 16 384 spectral channels in just one chip.
Results. Since May 2005 an MPIfR FFTS has been extensively used in all regular spectroscopic science observations. The performance at APEX was demonstrated to be very reliable and as good as measured in the first laboratory tests which finally led to the request to provide a second, facility type FFTS for APEX. The unit was delivered and commissioned in March this year.
Conclusions. Using a commercially available digitizer board, it was possible to develop a complete FFTS in only a few months. Successful observations at APEX demonstrate that this new generation of FPGA-based spectrometers easily matching and superseding the performance of older technology spectrometers and can built up much more easily. Furthermore, the by now available class of new high-speed ADCs and the continuous increase of FPGA processing power makes it very likely that FFTS can be pushed to broader bandwidth and even more spectral channels in the near future.


Key words: instrumentation: spectrographs -- techniques: spectroscopic



© ESO 2006


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