Xinjiang 110 m radio telescope (QiTai Telescope, QTT) will play an important role in the field of fundamental science, such as gravitational wave detection, black holes, star formation and galaxy origin, and also be applied to deep space explorations, for example, Lunar Exploration Program and Exploration of Mars and Venus. However, many ultra-wideband, multi-beam receivers will be applied for various science goals of QTT, and we will be faced with numerous significant challenges. In this paper, we have presented the technical progress of ultra-wideband receiver for large aperture telescope, including the ultra-wideband feeds/Ortho-Mode Transducer (OMT), Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) and multi-beam receiver. Meanwhile, key techniques and challenges were analyzed for receiver research and fabrication. Based on the science requirements and the technique development, we have proposed the preliminary scheme for QTT receiver system, and discussed about the feed forms, primary devices research and key coming difficulties and challenges. radio astronomy, ultra-wideband, receiver technology, large aperture telescope
Design of a test structure based on chevron-shaped thermal actuator for in-situ measurement of the fracture strength of MEMS thin films Nanotechnology and Precision Engineering 2, 163 (2019); Analysis on the positioning precision of CAPS Science in China Series G-Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy 52, 328 (2009); Actuator characterization of a man-portable precision maneuver concept Defence Technology 10, 141 (2014); Modeling and experiments of a nano-positioning and high frequency scanning piezoelectric platform based on function module actuator SCIENCE CHINA Technological Sciences QTT高精度位移促动器设计与测试
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.