Intro
On 08Nov21 the xband cal was changed to be
temperature regulated. On 07dec21 we took winking cal data on
blank sky to look at the cal spectra.
Setup:
- track blank sky: ra=16:00 dec=35:17
(az=311,el=61.72)
- take data for 120 seconds
- leave the 25 hz hardware winking cal on during the 120
seconds
- Dump spectra with the mock spectrometer
- 7x172MHz bands,
- 2048 chan/spc, 84KHz channel width
- bands spaced by about 142 MHz.
- band center freq:
8219.,8363.,8505.,8647.,8789.,8931.,9073. MHz
- 16 bit spectra
- 2 millisec integrations.
- a/d rms set to 30 counts.
Processing the data
For each of the 7 bands:
- input the file
- split the data into calon and calOff
- drop the 2ms spectra around each cal transition.
- average the calOn and calOff spectra
- compute calR= (calOn - calOff)/CalOff
- this puts the cal deflection in units of Tsys
- What we have computed is:
- let Tsky be the sky temp that goes directly into the
feed,
- Tsc be any scattered radiation into the feed,
- Tcal be the cal temp
- Trcv be the receiver temp (amps.. etc)
- Gsc(f) be the freq dependence of the scattered radiation
- Gcal(f) be the cal freq dependence
- Grcv(f) be the rcv temp freq dependence
- Gif be the IF band pass dependence
- i'm assuming that the sky freq dependence is relatively
flat across the 1GHz.
- Ton= (Tsky + Tsc*Gsc + Tcal*Gcal + Trcv*Grcv)*Gif
- Toff=(Tsky + Tsc*Gsc + Trcv*Grcv)*Gif
- calR=(Ton-Toff)/Toff= (Tcal*Gcal)/(Tsky + Tsc*Gsc +
Trcv*Grcv)
Looking at the data:
The plots shows the cal spectra an fit (.ps) (.pdf)
- Page 1: spectra with cal on and cal off
- The 7 spectra covering the xb freq range. No band pass
correction has been done.
- black in calOn, blue is with the calOff (Tsys).
- Page 2: calR=(calOn - calOff)/calOff spectra
and acf
- Top: (calOn - calOff)/calOff
- black polA, red polB
- the 7 spectra were interpolated to a single contiguous
spectra with an 84Khz channel width.
- Dividing by calOff removes the band passes and changes
the units to Tsys.
- Bottom: acf of (calon-calOff)/caloff
- The acf was computed for the calR excluding the edges
- This can show the spacing for any standing waves
(rippled) in the spectra.
- Black in polA, red is polB
- There are spikes at:
- .015 usecs (2.3 meters with n=1)
- .088 usecs (13.2 meters with n=1
- The CalR spectra has a frequency dependence
- from the cal
- From the division by CalOff spectra.
- Page 3: Fit to the calR spectra
- The fit used a linear polynomial and an 18th order
harmonic function
- black: the data
- blue : the fit
- The red * were excluded from the fit
- Top polA
- Middle: polB
- bottom: fit residuals
- black: polA rms: .0018 Tsys
- red: polB rms: .0018 Tsys
- If the cal is .3* tsys, then the fit residual =
.006 of cal Value.
Summary
- The cal value is about .3*Tsys
- The cal varies by about 23% across the band
- ripples are seen in the cal deflection value.
- .015 and .088 usecs delays.
- This differs a little from the ripples seen when looking
at the sky (more info)
- a linear with 18th order harmonic fit to the cal
deflection has an rms residual of .006 cal units
- The fit is including the ripples in the cal.
- If the ripples are from the cal diode or the insertion
into the cal coupler then this is correct.
- If the ripples are from the division by the calOff
spectra then they should not be included in the fit.
processing: x101/2112107/wcal_fit.pro