What is a Dicke switch in radio astronomy?

WHAT IS A DICKE SWITCH?

A Dicke switch is a rapid RF switch used in radio astronomy to reduce receiver gain drift.

It switches quickly between:

  1. Antenna (sky signal)
  2. Reference load (known temperature resistor)

This technique was invented by Robert H. Dicke.


THE PROBLEM

Radio receivers measure noise power:

P = G * (T_ant + T_rx)

Where: G = receiver gain T_ant = antenna (sky) temperature T_rx = receiver noise temperature

If G drifts slightly, it looks like a real sky signal.

When observing weak signals (like hydrogen at 1420 MHz), gain drift can dominate the measurement.


THE DICKE SOLUTION

Switch rapidly between:

ANTENNA <—-
>—- RF SWITCH —-> LNA —-> DETECTOR REFERENCE <—-/

Switching rate: typically 10 Hz to several kHz.

Now the receiver measures:

(Antenna signal) minus (Reference signal)

Because the switching is fast:

  • Gain changes are slow compared to switch rate
  • Both signals see the same gain
  • Subtracting them cancels gain drift

WHAT THE OUTPUT REPRESENTS

Output proportional to:

T_ant – T_ref

If T_ref is known, you can calibrate absolute temperature.


NOISE PENALTY

There is a cost:

Sensitivity is reduced by about:

sqrt(2)

This is called the Dicke radiometer penalty.


WHY THIS HELPS

Instead of measuring a slowly drifting DC level, you are effectively measuring an AC-modulated signal.

That makes it much easier to detect small differences using synchronous detection.


PRACTICAL 1420 MHz USE

Without switching: Slow LNA or SDR drift looks like hydrogen signal.

With Dicke switching: Long integrations become much more stable.

Some amateurs implement it by:

  • Switching between antenna and 50 ohm load
  • Subtracting averaged spectra in software

By Admin

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