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Continuous Calibration



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Next: Switching Modes Up: Calibration Previous: Calibration

Continuous Calibration

 

This new option uses the reference position of every cycle as the SKY in the calibration; it calculates and uses a new every cycle. This has several advantages:

  • Calibration using the CAL routine can be done less frequently than before, as the sky variations are taken into account automatically. Probably once every 30-60 mins between CALs will be fine.

  • The CALs need NOT be done off-source (as only the HOT and COLD data is actually used).

  • General calibration should be more reliable - particularly in variable sky conditions and/or at high frequencies.

  • The display is updated every cycle with the current running mean spectrum; this allows you to check baselines and data continuously, and not have to wait until the end of the complete sample. If you do many cycles, and see on the screen that the signal:noise is high enough before the end of scan, the integration can be halted (at the end of next cycle), and the data will be stored OK.

The disadvantage is slightly higher overheads (by a few %), but the less frequent CAL's will compensate for this. For very short cycle times (less than 15 seconds), the display will not be updated, as the overheads will become significant. One problem sometimes found with continuous calibration is that, if the total power levels from the receiver are drifting (due to problems with instrumental stability), then line calibration problems can sometime be seen due to incorrect values of being calculated and applied. This has occasionally been noted with RxA2 around 265GHz; see section 12 for more details. The old discrete calibration method can still be used by answering NO to the "Continuous Calibration?" question when the DAS is loaded.



Henry Matthews
Wed May 1 15:19:04 HST 1996
Contact: Per Friberg. Updated: Mon Aug 16 13:20:21 HST 2004

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