Newer results can be found here (20sep22)
Intro
Tsys vs elevation was measured on 24sep21.
The measurements consisted of:
- The telescope was driven between 7 and 87 degrees
elevation at 1 deg/second at 5 different azimuths:
- az=270,0,90,180, and 270 again
- The test was repeated 3 times.
- While driving the telescope the mock spectrometers took
data:
- 7 172 MHz bands were taken. cfr: 8221.00 8363.00 8505.00
8647.00 8789.00 8931.00 9073.00 MHz,
- 1024 channel across the 172 MHz
- data was sampled at .1 seconds
Processing the data:
- The total power for each .1 second spectrum was computed.
100 channels on each edge of the band were excluded.
- no rfi removal was attempted.
- pola and B were added
- The az,el,ra,dec,mjd were interpolated to the .1 sec
spectra (they are only recorded once a second).
- For each strip, the total power was scaled to the median
value between elevation 80 and 85 deg.
Plotting tsys vs elevation
The plots show the tsys vs elevation (.ps) (.pdf)
- Page 1: Tsys vs el for all 3 sets of observations using
the 8221 MHz band.
- The total power plots have been normalized to the median
value 80 to 85 deg elevation.
- Each color is an elevation strip at a different azimuth.
- Each observation has 5 elevation strips at
az=270,0,90,180,270
- Top: first set starting at 14:40:54
- the bumps at az 180,270 are probably
sidelobes/scattering from the sun
- Middle: 2nd set starting at 14:51:40
- Bottom: 3rd set starting at 15:39:28
- Page 2: Tsys vs el for the 7 freq bands when az=0.
- each color is a different frequency band
- Top: tsys vs elevation
- Bottom: tsys/tsys8221 band vs el
- The tsys vs el for each freq is normalized to
the 8221 band values
- There is some periodic rfi in the 8931 and 8791 MHz
bands
- The spikes are every 4 seconds.
- The 7 bands show a variation of up to 1.5%
Fitting Tsys vs elevation
Most of the tsys vs elevation is probably
coming from the amount of atmosphere the signal traverses at
each elevation.
Three different fits were tried
- fit1:Tsys=A0 + A1*sin(el)^A2
- fit2:Tsys=A0 + A1*sin(el)^-1
- fit3:Tsys=A0 + A1*el^A2
- Page 3: fit tsys vs elevation.
- az=0,freq=8221, set=1 was used for the fits.Pa
- Top: tsys vs el with fit
- black: measured data
- red: fit1 A0 + A1*sin(el)^A2
- green:fit2: A0 + A1*sin(el)^-1
- blue: fit3: A0 + A1*el^A2
- Bottom: fit Residual
- plot Measured - fit
- the residuals varied between .08% to .2% of Tsys.
- The residuals increase at low elevation.
- This could be ground radiation getting into the
beam.
- Page 4,5 How well does the fit work at other azimuths
- fit # 1 was used.
- Page 4: tsys vs el for the 5 azimuths and the az=0 fit
evaluated
- Black: measured data, red: az=0 fit evaluated at the
corresponding elevations
- Page 5: fit residuals
- Measured data - fit(from az=0)
- the fit gives residuals less that 1% of tsys
(excluding the sun,source variations).
- there is a small slope from el = 60 to 0
degrees when the azimuth was 180 and 270
degrees.
- this may a residual from the sun.
SUMMARY
- elevation strips 7 to 87 degrees were done at 5 different
azimuths (270,0,90,180,270) degrees.
- The set of 5 strips was repeated 3 times.
- 7 172 MHz freq bands were recorded and then the total
power was computed.
- The tsys vs elevation for the 7 freq bands varied by up
to 1.5%tsys.
- Going from el=88 to el=7 tsys increased by about 24%
- The tsys variation was modeled with A0 +
A1*sin(el)^A2 at az=0 degrees.
- each tsys vs el was normalized to the median value
el=80-85 degrees
- The results:
- for the same azimuth , the residuals were < .5% of
Tsys for the 7 bands
- for different azimuths the residuals less than 1%
(excluding sun, sources).
Tsys=A0 + A1*sin(el)^A2
|
A0
|
A1
|
A2
|
az=0 fit
|
.95231
|
.04765
|
-.85115
|
- If you wanted to use the fit and you didn't cover
el=80-85 deg to normalize your data:
- just pick another elevation range and normalize your
data to that part of the fit.
To do:
- repeat this at night to get rid of the sun.
processing:x101/210924/tsysvsel.pro