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ATCA Multi-Frequency Observing Strategies -- MFPLAN

   Given that you are going to perform a multi-frequency experiment, you will have determine the appropriate frequencies, and how many frequencies will be observed with each configuration. As the multi-frequency synthesis techniques in MIRIAD do not cope well with large spreads in frequencies (greater than about 30%), your frequencies should be confined to one of the ATCA observing bands (i.e. either 3, 6, 13 or 20 cm). In the following, we will assume that you want to derive the best result at one frequency band, and so all frequencies will be confined to one ATCA observing band.

There are some pretty simple rules to follow for the number of frequencies to observe per configuration:

The above are the number of frequencies to use per configuration. In general, if you have multiple configurations, you will observe with different frequencies for each configuration. When two or three configurations are being used, and u-v coverage out to 6 km is required, the best choice of configurations is a combination of 6.0 with 1.5 and 0.75 configurations ( not two or three 6.0 sets).

Given the number of frequencies to observe per configuration, and the configurations to be used, the task mfplan can find frequencies which optimise the u-v coverage. In doing so, it does not consider tangential holes -- effectively it assumes that the frequencies are switched sufficiently rapidly that these are not a major consideration. A description of the parameters of mfplan follows:

Task mfplan can take a while to run if there are many frequencies or configurations. As it iterates towards a solution, it prints out a ``temperature'' (a control parameter in the optimisation, which is not of much interest to you) and a ``goodness''. This ``goodness'', the parameter that mfplan is optimising, is the ratio of a measure of the goodness of the actual u-v coverage to the ideal u-v coverage that could be achieved given the number of baselines and number of frequencies. The goodness will always be less than 1, because mfplan has no control over the baselines (you, or the Time Assignment Committee and the ATCA itself, dictate these), and the frequency band is also constrained. If the number of configurations and frequencies are the same, the goodness measures are directly comparable. However the goodness measure does not give too much insight into the relative merits of using different numbers of configurations or frequencies.


next up previous contents
Next: Setting Up Your Up: Multi-Frequency Synthesis Observing Previous: Multi-Frequency Synthesis Data


Last generated by rsault@atnf.csiro.au on 16 Jan 1996