or Calibration in the Presence of Iridium August 12, 1998 The full-time activation of the Iridium constellation of communication satellites in September, 1998 will have a significant impact on VLA observations of the 1612 MHz transition of OH. Observers are advised to make use of the 25 MHz front end filter, and make sure that the Iridium downlink from 1621-1628 MHz does not pass through the correlator. Even with these precautions there will be interference when a satellite flies through the near sidelobes. Moreover, the 90 millisec uplink/downlink cycle of the Iridium constellation will continuously beat against the 102 millisec calibration cycle of the VLA. When any Iridium satellite is above the horizon and transmitting (100% of the time after September 1998) this beating is sufficiently strong to corrupt the on-line system temperature corrections applied to the data and to cause all data to be flagged due to wild system temperature variations. For this reason, the normal calibration cycle must be turned off during all 1612 MHz observations (or any other observation that include the frequencies between 1620-1630 MHz in the 50 or 25 MHz front-end used for measuring the system temperature). This will result in some degradation in the accuracy of the absolute flux density calibration as shown in this plot of calibration error with elevation. There are a couple ways to recover accurate flux density calibration. One way is to schedule the primary flux calibrator (e.g. 3C286) at an elevation comparable to that of the secondary flux calibrator(s) used. Another option is to spend a few minutes at an adjacent frequency (say 1665 MHz) that is clear of RFI on both the primary and secondary flux calibrators in order to obtain an accurate estimate of the flux density of the secondary calibrator(s). To turn off the calibration cycle a request should be made to the array operator to set columns 64 and 65 blank in a special Front End Parameters file (better known as the SYSLROT file). An example of such an instruction is shown below, along with a short segment of an OH observe file: //* *** Special Instructions //* //* *** uses GT0LROT: with iridium filter in (59-60=T) and //* *** cals off (64-65 both blank). //* *** 2148+611 22 07 35 21 48 16.0454 +61 07 05.838C LL C 4444 2.23 //DS 2AD H 10 6 6 6 6 //LO -3.2 -3.2 3790 3790 1111 GT0LROT //FISVTL 000000.000 000000.000 1612.231000 1612.231000 This example also shows how to ask for the iridium filter which has been installed in 3 antennas. This is a room temperature band pass filter cutting off all signals above 1616 MHz. Those planning a 1612 MHz observation or continuum observation near 1620 MHz are encouraged to contact the under-signed (gtaylor@nrao.edu). Even with the above precautions, large amounts of data may be corrupted at some level. Tests are in progress to determine the typical amount of affected data and the optimal observing strategy to minimise the impact of Iridium. - Greg Taylor
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