Ron and I did some tests March 19th (2003) to check typical move and settling
times for the GBT, at the request of Lincoln Greenhill.
The results are of general interest to anyone who wants to move frequently
back and forth between a source and a calibrator or between an on-source
and off-source position.
The calibrator 3C147 was observed at 9.8 GHz and we moved to the source
from distances ranging from 10' to 4 degrees in azimuth and 0.5 to 2 deg
in elevation. The "on-source" position was actually at the half-power point
of the source, so that we could look at feed-arm vibrations (but that's
another story).
The total move time is how long it takes from when a scan is requested
to start until the antenna is tracking the source. The scan coordinator
gives a countdown, which appears to start about 2 seconds after the scan
start button is pushed. After the countdown, the data taking starts.
The data shows that most of the time, the antenna is not quite on source
when data taking starts. The first amplitudes in a scan are about
60-75% of the on-source value. The amplitude reaches the on-source value
about 5 seconds after the scan starts. The total move times that we
list are the sum of the countdown time plus 2 seconds, plus the time after
the scan starts for the amplitude to reach the on-source value
(usually 3-6 seconds).
Results are as follows:
Distance of move Total Move time
----------------- ------------------
dEL +0.5 deg 18 sec
+0.5 16
+1.0 21
+2.0 28
-0.5 16
dAZ +1.5 deg 29 sec
+0.5 21
-0.5 20
-0.5 19
-0.5 21
-1.0 26
-2.0 26
-4.0 35
-0.17 12