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: http://www.naic.edu/~nolan/radar/Castalia.html  
 Дата изменения: Thu Feb 24 23:07:40 2005 Дата индексирования: Tue Oct 2 04:37:03 2012 Кодировка: Поисковые слова: mercury program  | 
 
 This series of delay-doppler radar images
	of the asteroid 4769 Castalia (also known as 1989 PB) were
	taken at approximately 2 minute intervals on 1989 August
	22 at the Arecibo Observatory.  The horizontal axis is
	Doppler frequency, and the vertical axis is the time the
	echo was received ("delay").  These two scales map
	differently onto distance, which has been approximately
	compensated by replicating the pixels in the vertical
	dimension, yielding a resolution of approximately 150 m
	(horizontal) by 300 m (vertical).
	
      
 The images are fainter at the beginning and the end of the
	sequence because the antenna gain was a fairly strong function
	of zenith angle when these images were taken.  The published
	results (Ostro et al., 1990, Science 248:1523)
	have corrected for this factor.  These images have been
	stretched to look decent on a browser, rather than for
	accuracy.
      
    
 
Each image above is
      the sum of 27 separately reduced (Fourier transformed) data
      sets, or "looks".  With some limitations, these looks can be
      traded off between resolution and signal-to-noise ratio.  The
      image here shows this effect for four of the images above.
      The left image in each pair is as above.  The sampling
      frequency was 16 ms, and there are 64 complex samples in each
      look, giving a resolution of 0.95 Hz (~150 m), and allowing 27
      looks to be summed (the total time of each observation is
      about 30 s).  On the right, the same data were re-transformed
      using 256 samples in each look, followed by 256 zeroes.  Thus
      these images have a frequency resolution of 0.24 Hz (~40 m),
      and a frequency sampling of 0.12 Hz, but the signal to noise
      ratio should be 2 times worse, as only 6 looks can be summed.
      Only the frequency resolution can be adjusted in this way, so
      the delay resolution is unchanged.  Just for grins, you can
      see this matrix as an MPEG
	animation (a measly 72 kB).
	
    
Steve Ostro and Keith Rosema have further information on 4769 Castalia and other asteroids including 4179 Toutatis and 1620 Geographos in their Asteroid Radar Research pages.
Mike Nolan
Last modified 1996 May 15