A2130
        (galfacts) reported strong rfi (lots of overflows from the mock
        spectrometer) on the evening of 02nov11.  The punta salinas
        frequency agile radar was running in all frequencies until about
        20:00
        ast (it then changed to mode A 4 frequency mode). After the mode
        switch, the users reported still having some trouble with rfi
        (although
        less than before the radar moved to mode A).
        
        A2130 used the mock spectrometers with 172 MHz bw, 4096
        channels, 1
        millisecond full stokes dumps.
        
            Data from 22:35 ast was used to check the
        spectra.
        
        The 
dynamic spectra
          shows one
          record of data (600 ms) (.gif):
        
          - the dynamic spectra has a time resolution of 1
            millisecond.
- the pulsed radar have ipps of 1.4 to 3 millisecs.
 
- The horizontal axis has increasing frequency to the left.
            
 
- Some of the rfi is:
            - Punta
                salinas
              mode A 4 frequencies:
              - 1258.34, 1248.9,  1242.2, and  1234.1440.
- The radar transmits two frequencies (separated by 15
                MHz)
                simultaneously then hops to the next pair:
                - (1258,1242) and (1248,1234).
- There is also a long and short range mode.
 
- 1270 boriquen radar
- faa Radar 1330,1350
- Many intermods which look to line up in time with the
              punta
              salinas 4 frequencies.
        The punta salinas radar blanks their transmitter when it points
        at the
        observatory. 65 seconds of data (1 file) was checked to see that
        the  blanking was still aligned with the direction of the
        observatory. 
        The plots show
 the
          total
          power vs time for the 4 punta salinas mode A frequencies (.ps)
        (
.pdf):
        
          - The 4 frames are the total power vs time for the 4 punta
            salinas
            frequencies.
            - I took the peak channel value around each radar
              frequency.
 
- The plot shows 65 seconds of data with 1 millisecond time
            resolution. The horizontal axis is label hr.hr ast.
- You can see where the power from the radar completely goes
            away. 
 
            - This is when they blank in our direction.
- The blanking is spaced by 12 seconds (the radar rotation
              frequency).
- The power levels on each side of the blanking is close
              to the
              peak value. This tells us that the radar blanking is
              aligned with the
              observatory direction.
        600 milliseconds of data was used to verify that the intermods
        (seen in
        the dynamic spectra) are actually coming from the punta salinas
        transmitter.
        The plots show
 the total
          power
          vs time for the punta salinas radar and the intermods (.ps)
        (
.pdf)
        
          - Page 1: avg and rms for the 600 milliseconds.
            - Top; average spectra. The colors are polA,B,stokes U and
              V
              - The vertical scale in spectrometer counts (16 bits
                max).
- Bottom: rms/mean for each channel.
              - The puntasalinas have strong variability (probably
                because of
                the blanking).
- Page 2: overplot the punta salinas pwr vs time and the
            intermods:
            - Top: 300 seconds of data.
              - black:1256,1241  frequencies transmitted together
- red: 1247.8, 1232.8 freq transmitted together
- green: 1298.6. this aligns with the black frequencies
- blue: 1289.5. this aligns with the red frequencies.
- Bottom:
              - blowup in time showing the alignment of the intermods
                and the
                radar frequencies.
- Overflows in the fft butterfly section of the mock
            spectrometer
            can splash radar power across the band. I checked and this
            record had
            no overflows.
        I looked at the number of mock overflows a2130 has had in its
        previous
        sessions:
        
        The plot shows the 
number
          of
          mock overflows by observing session (.ps) (
.pdf):
        
          - The vertical axis is a log scale
- the session dates were:
oct:7,8,10,11,12,13,14,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,28,29,30,31,nov:1,2,3
            - So the dates were not contiguous.
- the blue dashed line is where the cals started.
- the red dashed line is the night punta salinas ran in all
            freq
            till 20:00 ast
            - If i throw out the data prior to 20:00 for this date,
              there are
              about 500 overflows. This is similar to other nights. So
              the observers
              comment about continued problems after the modeA switch
              was not
              something different from other nights.
 
- There is a large variation in the overflow errors vs
            observing
            session. 
 
            - They are covering the same za range (except the cals add
              more
              counts in a few regions).
- The scattering of rfi into the dome is za dependent
              (geometry)
              with much more getting in at some narrow za ranges.
- The radars have 12 second rotations.
- The variation in counts by session  may be the
              beating of
              when the dome was at certain za's vs  when the radar
              pointed at
              the observatory.
 
        Summary:
        
          - punta salinas radar ran in all frequencies for the first
            part
            (till 20:00 ast) of the a2130 run on 02nov11.
- They then moved to mode A.
- mock spectrometer overflows continued as well as birdies
            appearing at  frequencies other than the standard radar
            frequencies. 
 
            - Looking at the dynamic spectra and the plots, many of
              these
              birdies were being created (probably in our system) by the
              punta
              salinas radar.
- The blanking of the punta salinas transmitter was working
            correctly during this period.
            - The radar was blanked for 2.537 secs
- 2.537sec/12sec * 360. = 76.1 degrees blanking. 
 
- This is a less than the +/-45 degrees we had back in
              2006.
 
- Looking at the mock spectrometer overflow errors, they
            were
            grouped in time. This was probably a geometric affect (the
            dome was
            moving from 2 to 20 degs za).
- The faa radar was also running during this time..
- Excluding the mock overflows before the radar went to mode
            A,
            02nov11 session overflows was similar to other nights.
- There is a large variation in overflows by observing
            session.
            This may be a beating of the dome being at a particular
            postion and the
            12 second rotation period of the radar. 
 
processing:
          x101/111102/puntasal.pro