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Dive into the research topics where Jae-Hwan Yeom is active.

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Featured researches published by Jae-Hwan Yeom.


The Astronomical Journal | 2014

EARLY SCIENCE WITH THE KOREAN VLBI NETWORK: EVALUATION OF SYSTEM PERFORMANCE

Sang-Sung Lee; Leonid Petrov; Do-Young Byun; Jongsoo Kim; Taehyun Jung; Min-Gyu Song; Chung Sik Oh; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Do-Heung Je; Seog-Oh Wi; Bong Won Sohn; Se-Jin Oh; Kee-Tae Kim; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Moon-Hee Chung; Jiman Kang; Seog-Tae Han; Jung-Won Lee; Bong Gyu Kim; Hyunsoo Chung; Hyun-Goo Kim; Hyo Ryoung Kim; Yong-Woo Kang; Se-Hyung Cho

We report the very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observing performance of the Korean VLBI Network (KVN). The KVN is the first millimeter-dedicated VLBI network in East Asia. The KVN consists of three 21 m radio telescopes with baseline lengths in a range of 305-476 km. The quasi-optical system equipped on the antennas allows simultaneous observations at 22, 43, 86, and 129 GHz. The first fringes of the KVN were obtained at 22 GHz on 2010 June 8. Test observations at 22 and 43 GHz on 2010 September 30 and 2011 April 4 confirmed that the full cycle of VLBI observations works according to specification: scheduling, antenna control system, data recording, correlation, post-correlation data processing, astrometry, geodesy, and imaging analysis. We found that decorrelation due to instability in the hardware at times up to 600 s is negligible. The atmosphere fluctuations at KVN baseline are partly coherent, which allows us to extend integration time under good winter weather conditions up to 600 s without significant loss of coherence. The post-fit residuals at KVN baselines do not exhibit systematic patterns, and the weighted rms of the residuals is 14.8 ps. The KVN is ready to image compact radio sources both in snapshot and full-track modes with residual noise in calibrated phases of less than 2 deg at 22 and 43 GHz and with dynamic ranges of ~300 for snapshot mode and ~1000 for full-track mode. With simultaneous multi-frequency observations, the KVN can be used to make parsec-scale spectral index maps of compact radio sources.


The Astronomical Journal | 2014

Verification of the Astrometric Performance of the Korean VLBI Network, Using Comparative SFPR Studies with the VLBA at 14/7 mm

Mar ' ia J. Rioja; Richard Dodson; Taehyun Jung; Bong Won Sohn; Do-Young Byun; I. Agudo; Se-Hyung Cho; Sang-Sung Lee; Jongsoo Kim; Kee-Tae Kim; Chung Sik Oh; Seog-Tae Han; Do-Heung Je; Moon-Hee Chung; Seog-Oh Wi; Jiman Kang; Jung-Won Lee; Hyunsoo Chung; Hyo Ryoung Kim; Hyun-Goo Kim; Chang-Hoon Lee; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Se-Jin Oh; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Min-Gyu Song; Yong-Woo Kang

The Korean VLBI Network (KVN) is a new mm-VLBI dedicated array with capability for simultaneous observations at multiple frequencies, up to 129 GHz. The innovative multi-channel receivers present significant benefits for astrometric measurements in the frequency domain. The aim of this work is to verify the astrometric performance of the KVN using a comparative study with the VLBA, a well established instrument. For that purpose, we carried out nearly contemporaneous observations with the KVN and the VLBA, at 14/7 mm, in April 2013. The KVN observations consisted of simultaneous dual frequency observations, while the VLBA used fast frequency switching observations. We used the Source Frequency Phase Referencing technique for the observational and analysis strategy. We find that having simultaneous observations results in a superior performance for compensation of all atmospheric terms in the observables, in addition to offering other significant benefits for astrometric analysis. We have compared the KVN astrometry measurements to those from the VLBA. We find that the structure blending effects introduce dominant systematic astrometric shifts and these need to be taken into account. We have tested multiple analytical routes to characterize the impact of the low resolution effects for extended sources in the astrometric measurements. The results from the analysis of KVN and full VLBA datasets agree within 2-


The Astrophysical Journal | 2014

THE FIRST VERY LONG BASELINE INTERFEROMETRY IMAGE OF A 44 GHz METHANOL MASER WITH THE KVN AND VERA ARRAY (KaVA)

Naoko Matsumoto; Tomoya Hirota; Koichiro Sugiyama; Kee-Tae Kim; Mikyoung Kim; Do-Young Byun; Taehyun Jung; James O. Chibueze; Mareki Honma; Osamu Kameya; Jongsoo Kim; A-Ran Lyo; Kazuhito Motogi; Chungsik Oh; Nagisa Shino; Kazuyoshi Sunada; Jaehan Bae; Hyunsoo Chung; Moon-Hee Chung; Se-Hyung Cho; Myoung-Hee Han; Seog-Tae Han; Jung-Wook Hwang; Do-Heung Je; Takaaki Jike; Dong-Kyu Jung; Jin-seung Jung; Ji-hyun Kang; Jiman Kang; Yong-Woo Kang

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Journal of the Korean Astronomical Society | 2015

A NEW HARDWARE CORRELATOR IN KOREA: PERFORMANCE EVALUATION USING KVN OBSERVATIONS

Sang-Sung Lee; Chung Sik Oh; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Se-Jin Oh; Jongsoo Kim; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Hyo Ryoung Kim; Dong-Gyu Jung; Do-Young Byun; Taehyun Jung; Noriyuki Kawaguchi; Katsunori M. Shibata; Kiyoaki Wajima

of the thermal error estimate. We interpret the discrepancy as arising from the different resolutions. We find that the KVN provides astrometric results with excellent agreement, within 1-


Journal of the Korean Astronomical Society | 2015

AMPLITUDE CORRECTION FACTORS OF KOREAN VLBI NETWORK OBSERVATIONS

Sang-Sung Lee; Do-Young Byun; Chung Sik Oh; Hyo Ryoung Kim; Jongsoo Kim; Taehyun Jung; Se-Jin Oh; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Dong-Kyu Jung; Jae-Hwan Yeom

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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2017

Pilot KaVA monitoring on the M 87 jet: Confirming the inner jet structure and superluminal motions at sub-pc scales

Kazuhiro Hada; Jong Ho Park; Motoki Kino; Kotaro Niinuma; Bong Won Sohn; Hyun Wook Ro; Taehyun Jung; Juan-Carlos Algaba; G. Zhao; Sang-Sung Lee; Kazunori Akiyama; Sascha Trippe; Kiyoaki Wajima; Satoko Sawada-Satoh; Fumie Tazaki; Ilje Cho; Jeffrey A. Hodgson; Jeong Ae Lee; Yoshiaki Hagiwara; Mareki Honma; Shoko Koyama; Junghwan Oh; Taeseak Lee; Hyemin Yoo; Noriyuki Kawaguchi; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Se-Jin Oh; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Dong-Kyu Jung; Chungsik Oh

, when compared to a VLBA configuration which has a similar resolution. Therefore this comparative study verifies the astrometric performance of KVN using SFPR at 14/7 mm, and validates the KVN as an astrometric instrument.


Proceedings of 8th European VLBI Network Symposium — PoS(8thEVN) | 2007

Recent progress in Korean VLBI Network (KVN) project

Bong Won Sohn; Hyo Ryoung Kim; Hyunsoo Chung; Chang-Hoon Lee; D. K. Roh; Hyo-Ryung Kim; Seog-Tae Han; Do-Young Byun; Kee-Tae Kim; Seog-Oh Wi; Se-Jin Oh; Kiyoaki Wajima; M. H. Jung; J. Y. Yi; Min-Gyu Song; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Tae-Young Jung; Tetsuo Sasao

We have carried out the first very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) imaging of a 44 GHz classI methanol maser (70‐61A + ) associated with a millimeter core MM2 in a massive star-forming region IRAS 18151−1208 with KaVA (KVN and VERA Array), which is a newly combined array of KVN (Korean VLBI Network) and VERA (VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry). We have succeeded in imaging compact maser features with a synthesized beam sizeof2.7milliarcseconds ×1.5milliarcseconds(mas).Thesefeaturesaredetectedatalimitednumber ofbaselines within the length of shorter than ≈ 650 km corresponding to 100 Mλ in the uv-coverage. The central velocity and the velocity width of the 44 GHz methanol maser are consistent with those of the quiescent gas rather than the outflow traced by the SiO thermal line. The minimum component size among the maser features is ∼5mas×2mas, which corresponds to the linear size of ∼15 AU × 6 AU assuming a distance of 3 kpc. The brightness temperatures of these features range from ∼3.5 × 10 8 to 1.0 × 10 10 K, which are higher than the estimated lower limit from a previous Very Large Array observation with the highest spatial resolution of ∼50 mas. The 44 GHz classI methanol maser in IRAS 18151−1208 is found to be associated with the MM2 core, which is thought to be less evolved than another millimeter core MM1 associated with the 6.7 GHz classII methanol maser.


Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society | 2009

A STUDY ON DEVELOPMENT OF VLBI CORRELATION SUBSYSTEM TRIAL PRODUCT

Se-Jin Oh; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Hyunsoo Chung; Chang-Hoon Lee; Hideyuki Kobayashi; Noriyuki Kawaguchi; Kazuyuki Kawakami

We report results of the performance evaluation of a new hardware correlator in Korea, the Daejeon correlator, developed by the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI) and the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ). We conduct Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations at 22 GHz with the Korean VLBI Network (KVN) in Korea and the VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry (VERA) in Japan, and correlated the aquired data with the Daejeon correlator. For evaluating the performance of the new hardware correlator, we compare the correlation outputs from the Daejeon correlator for KVN observations with those from a software correlator, the Distributed FX (DiFX). We investigate the correlated flux densities and brightness distributions of extragalactic compact radio sources. The comparison of the two correlator outputs shows that they are consistent with each other within < 8%, which is comparable with the amplitude calibration uncertainties of KVN observations at 22 GHz. We also find that the 8% difference in flux density is caused mainly by (a) the difference in the way of fringe phase tracking between the DiFX software correlator and the Daejeon hardware correlator, and (b) an unusual pattern (a double-layer pattern) of the amplitude correlation output from the Daejeon correlator. The visibility amplitude loss by the double-layer pattern is as small as 3%. We conclude that the new hardware correlator produces reasonable correlation outputs for continuum observations, which are consistent with the outputs from the DiFX software correlator.


ursi asia pacific radio science conference | 2016

8192 Mbps wideband correlation for the KaVA

Se-Jin Oh; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Chungsik Oh; Hyo-Ryoung Kim; Dong-Kyu Jung

We report results of investigation of amplitude calibration for very long baseline interferome-try (VLBI) observations with Korean VLBI Network (KVN). Amplitude correction factors are estimated based on comparison of KVN observations at 22 GHz correlated by Daejeon hardware correlator and DiFX software correlator in Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI) with Very Long Base-line Array (VLBA) observations at 22 GHz by DiFX software correlator in National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO). We used the observations for compact radio sources, 3C 454.3, NRAO 512, OJ 287, BL Lac, 3C 279, 1633+382, and 1510−089, which are almost unresolved for baselines in a range of 350-477 km. Visibility data of the sources obtained with similar baselines at KVN and VLBA are se-lected, fringe-fitted, calibrated, and compared for their amplitudes. We find that visibility amplitudes of KVN observations should be corrected by factors of 1.10 and 1.35 when correlated by DiFX and Daejeon correlators, respectively. These correction factors are attributed to the combination of two steps of 2-bit quantization in KVN observing systems and characteristics of Daejeon correlator.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Spatially Resolved HCN Absorption Features in the Circumnuclear Region of NGC 1052

Satoko Sawada-Satoh; Duk-Gyoo Roh; Se-Jin Oh; Sang-Sung Lee; Do-Young Byun; Seiji Kameno; Jae-Hwan Yeom; Dong-Kyu Jung; Hyo-Ryoung Kim; Ju-Yeon Hwang

We report the initial results of our high-cadence monitoring program on the radio jet in the active galaxy M87, obtained by the KVN and VERA Array (KaVA) at 22 GHz. This is a pilot study that preceded a larger KaVA-M87 monitoring program, which is currently ongoing. The pilot monitoring was mostly performed every two to three weeks from December 2013 to June 2014, at a recording rate of 1 Gbps, obtaining the data for a total of 10 epochs. We successfully obtained a sequence of good quality radio maps that revealed the rich structure of this jet from <~1 mas to 20 mas, corresponding to physical scales (projected) of ~0.1-2 pc (or ~140-2800 Schwarzschild radii). We detected superluminal motions at these scales, together with a trend of gradual acceleration. The first evidence for such fast motions and acceleration near the jet base were obtained from recent VLBA studies at 43 GHz, and the fact that very similar kinematics are seen at a different frequency and time with a different instrument suggests these properties are fundamental characteristics of this jet. This pilot program demonstrates that KaVA is a powerful VLBI array for studying the detailed structural evolution of the M87 jet and also other relativistic jets.

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Se-Jin Oh

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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Duk-Gyoo Roh

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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Do-Young Byun

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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Hyunsoo Chung

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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Taehyun Jung

Korea University of Science and Technology

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Sang-Sung Lee

Seoul National University

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Bong Won Sohn

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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Chungsik Oh

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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Do-Heung Je

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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Seog-Tae Han

Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute

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