MIRIAD
's suite of calibration tasks generally produce or use items
which contain the relevant calibration tables and parameters.
The tasks to manipulate these calibration tables generally
have names start
with gp
, though there are a few exceptions such as selfcal and
mfcal.
The calibration parameters are antenna-based ones, with
the calibration data being used to derive a model of the response of each
antenna. The response of an antenna to radiation is modelled by
four sets of parameters:
Ignoring leakage (which is discussed in too much detail in Chapter 11), we model the composite gain function of an antenna (representing both atmospheric and instrumental terms) as
Here g(t)
is the frequency-independent part of the antenna gain,
is the bandpass function,
is a delay term. The delay is calculated with respect to a
reference frequency,
.
For dual polarisation systems the two polarisation bands are
assumed to have independent gains and bandpasses, although the delay
is common.
Note that MIRIAD datasets cannot contain more than one set of calibration tables -- you cannot have multiple versions of calibration tables. Running a calibration task twice will result in the first calibration table being overwritten. This may be inconvenient if the dataset has two sets of data that need to be calibrated separately.