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: http://www.atnf.csiro.au/vlbi/dokuwiki/doku.php/difx/plotpcal
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plotpcal
is packaged the difx2fits package. It was introduced with
DiFX-2.4 and currently only operates on DiFX output from DiFX-2.4 and
later. It allows plotting of DiFX-extracted pulse cal tones in a number of ways.
The program gets its input from the command line. The general structure of
a command line is:
plotpcal [options] [operation] [tone selection] [data]
The installed version of the program, which you should be able to copy, is /home/swc/software/VLBADIFX-TRUNK/bin/plotpcal
[options] will eventually be more useful, but currently the only thing it can support is:
which replaces the scatter plot with a line plot
[operation] chooses what calculation to perform. Currently there are 4 options:
phase plot the phase of the tone(s) vs. time
amp plot the amplitude of the tone(s) vs. time
xy plot the real part vs. imag part
delay plot the delay as determined by differencing phases of 2 tones
[tone selection] is where things get complicated. For the first three operations, where a single tone is considered at a time the following syntax is currently supported. One or more of these can be included on the command line and they can be of different kinds. The operations that these are relevant for are amp, phase and xy.
rt=x,y òÀÜRecord Channel ToneòÀÝ
x is the record baseband channel (0-based) y is the tone number in that baseband channel (0-based)
rf=x,y òÀÜRecord Channel FreqòÀÝ
x is the record baseband channel (0-based) y is the frequency (MHz) of the desired tone
f=x òÀÜFrequencyòÀÝ
x is the frequency (MHz) of the desired tone(s) Note: more than one tone may match. They will be orderd by record channel
f=%x òÀÜFrequency mod xòÀÝ
Select all tones from all recorded channels where frequency mod x = 0 (MHz)
r=x òÀÜRecord channelòÀÝ
x is the record baseband channel (0-based) Note: all tones in that channel will be selected. Usually for USB the tones will be in order of inceasing frequency and for LSB the tones will be in order of decreasing frequency
t=x òÀÜTone numberòÀÝ
x is the tone number in that baseband channel (0-based) For all record channels, tone x will be selected. The ordering is by record number (starting with 0)
For the delay operation two tones are differenced. They must come from the same record baseband channel. The following tone selections can be used:
rt=x,y,z òÀÜRecord channel, tone 1, tone 2òÀÝ
x is the record baseband channel (0-based) y is one tone from that record band (0-based) z is the other tone from that record band (0-based) Delay is calculated from (Phi(tone1)-Phi(tone2))/(Freq(tone1)-Freq(tone2))
rt=x,ends òÀÜExtreme channels from one record channelòÀÝ
x is the record baseband channel (0-based) Selected tones are the highest and lowest frequency tones from the band. Sometimes this is not good because tones near the edge of the band can be corrupted by filter response / aliasing.
rt=x,good òÀÜChannels near the end of one record channelòÀÝ
x is the record baseband channel (0-based) Selected channels try to be 1/8 of the band away from the edge frequency when possible.
rt=x,pairs òÀÜSelect pairs of channels across one record channelòÀÝ
x is the record baseband channel (0-based) For a channel with nTone tones, form nTone/2 delays by considering first and second tones for first delay, third and fourth for second delay, ...
t=x,y òÀÜTone 1 and Tone 2 from all channelsòÀÝ
Like rt=x,y,z but for all record channels. Will produce nChannel delays ordered by record channel number.
t=ends òÀÜExtreme channels from all record channelsòÀÝ
Like rt=x,ends but for all channels. Will produce nChannel delays ordered by record channel number.
t=good òÀÜChannels near the end of all record channelsòÀÝ
Like rt=x,good, but for all channels. Will produce nChannel delays ordered by record channel number.
[data] is a list of DiFX derived pulse cal data. When produced thay come from the .difx/ directories produced by DiFX. There will be a separate file per antenna per job.
When plotpcal is run it first sorts data by antenna name and makes one plot per antenna using the python matplotlib plotting package. All standard matplotlib features are available.
First grab some data (or use data you collected yourself)
Amplitude of a single tone (record channel 2, tone 0)
plotpcal amp rt=2,0 *.difx/PCAL*
Things to note: first sample is low, then three pairs of scans, each pair being a 5 MHz spacing followed by a 1 MHz spacing. 5 MHz spacing should have 5 times the voltage (as plotted) or 25x the power.
Note: there are two stations: HN and SC. When you close the first (HN) window, a second window will appear shortly for SC. Kill that to end the program.
Note: you can zoom, òÀæ
Amp of 2 tones:
plotpcal amp rt=2,0 rt=4,0 *.difx/PCAL*
Amp of 2 tones (but only one tone for the 5 MHz mode):
plotpcal amp rt=2,0 rt=4,2 *.difx/PCAL*
Phase of 2 tones:
plotpcal phase rt=2,0 rt=2,1 *.difx/PCAL*
Note: tone 0 and tone 1 differ in actual frequency between two setups.
Phase of 2 tones on 5 MHz steps
plotpcal phase rf=0,%5 *.difx/PCAL*
Plot re vs im for all tones for one record band
plotpcal xy r=5 *.difx/PCAL*
Plot one delay for each record channel
plotpcal delay t=good *.difx/PCAL*
Note how much more precise (factor of 5ish) the 5 MHz pulse cals are!
Except for 2 baseband channels from HN (cyan on top and magenta on bottom, corresponding to record channels 6 and 7), delays from a single IF match well, as expected. The mismatch here is curious.