VLBI on the GBT |
The GBT does VLBI recording with a: |
Setup information: |
Related Information: |
Proposals requesting GBT participation in VLBA or global VLBI
observations should be submitted to the VLBA only, not to the GBT.
Proposals requesting the GBT participation in a VLB experiment that
includes no other NRAO telescopes should be submitted to the VLBA as well as to
the GBT and other agencies as appropriate, such as the EVN.
Refer to:
VLBA Proposals
The data acquisition system is similar to those at the VLBA stations:
the new RDBE unit and Mark5C recorder are in use, allowing wide-band recording
up to 2 Gbits/sec.
Two modes are available, "PFB" mode provides 16 32-MHz channels and a total
recording rate of 2 Gbits/sec. Channels may be placed at any 32-MHz step along
the frequency axis. The "DDC" mode allows up to 4 channels of bandwidth 1 to 128 MHz.
With two RDBEs available, up to 8 DDC channels may be used.
The SCHED default frequency setups should be correct for writing schedules
for the new system.
The old data acquisition system with the DAR rack and Mark5A recorder has been
retired. No proposals should request it.
Proposals
For all VLBA information, refer to:
VLBA guide and proposer information
and
More proposer information
VLBA-compatible recording
Schedule Preparation
Scheduling is done through the VLBA analysts in Socorro. Schedules are
prepared with the
SCHED program. The GBT uses the standard VLBA
schedule files ("*.key" and "*.vex" files). The user needs to prepare a ".key" file for
SCHED in the usual way and send it to the VLBA analysts.
Differences with the standard VLBA stations should be noted:
The receivers and frequency bands are listed in the following table. Note that some bands are available on the GBT but not on the VLBA.
Note also the time it takes to change bands, described above.
For more information, consult:
|
|
GBT Receivers |
|||||||
VLBA Band |
VLBA Frequency Range (GHz) |
GBT Frequency Range(GHz) |
GBT Receiver |
available | net sideband |
primary beam FWHM |
est. SEFD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
90 cm | 0.312 - 0.342 | 0.290 - 0.395 | Rcvr_342 (PF1) | yes | lower | 36' | 25 Jy |
---- | --- | 0.385 - 0.520 | Rcvr_450 (PF1) | yes | lower | 27' | 22 Jy |
50 cm | 0.596 - 0.626 | 0.510 - 0.690 | Rcvr_600 (PF1) | yes | lower | 21' | 12 Jy |
----- | --- | 0.680 - 0.920 | Rcvr_800 (PF1) | yes | lower | 15' | 15 Jy |
----- | --- | 0.910 - 1.230 | Rcvr_1070 (PF2) | yes | lower | 12' | 10 Jy |
21/18 cm | 1.35 - 1.75 | 1.1 - 1.8 | Rcvr1_2 | yes | lower | 9' | 10 Jy |
13 cm | 2.15 - 2.35 | 1.68 - 2.60 | Rcvr2_3 | yes | lower | 5.8' | 12 Jy |
6 cm | 3.9 - 7.9 | 3.9 - 7.9 | Rcvr4_6 | yes | lower | 2.5' | 10 Jy |
4 cm | 8.0 - 8.8 | 7.9 - 10.1 | Rcvr8_10 | yes | lower | 1.4' | 15 Jy |
2 cm | 12.0 - 15.4 | 11.8 - 18.0 | Rcvr12_18 | yes | upper | 54" | 20 Jy |
1 cm | 21.7 - 24.1 | 18.0 - 27.5 | RcvrArray18_26 | yes | lower | 32" | ~23 Jy |
---- | ---- | 26.0 - 40.0 | Rcvr26_40 | yes (winter only) | upper | 22" | 20-40 Jy |
7 mm | 41.0 - 45.0 | 40.0 - 50.0 | Rcvr40_52 | yes (winter only) | upper | 16" | ~60 Jy |
3 mm | 80.0 - 90.0 | 68 - 92 | Rcvr68_92 | yes (winter only) | upper | 10" | 100-150 Jy |
Frequency Band | Interval between pointing scans |
---|---|
4-6, 8-10 GHz | 4-5 hours |
12-16 GHz | 3-4 hours |
18-26 GHz | 1.5-2 hours |
40-90 GHz | 30-60 minutes |
The observer should select a strong continuum source (flux density ≥0.5 Jy, or ≥1.0 Jy for ν>20 GHz) within about 15 degrees and at similar elevation as the program source. Include the pointing calibration source in the VLBI observing schedule at intervals as indicated above. Allow about 6 minutes for the pointing and focus check.
Note also that significant pointing errors at 7mm can happen when the wind speed is greater than 3 m/sec (7 miles per hour). For 1.3 cm significant pointing errors can occur for wind speeds greater than 6 m/sec (14 miles per hour). Refer to PointingFocusGeneralStrategy for details.
To include a pointing and focus scan in your schedule, put commands into your ".key" file similar to the following:
comment='GBT pointing scan.' peak=1 stations = gbt_vlba source = 'J0920+4441' dwell = 06:00 vlamode='VA' norecord / nopeak |
Refer to the SCHED MANUAL for details of schedule preparation.
Pointing Sources for high frequency observing should be strong, i.e.,
stronger than 3 Jy if possible.
When observing with the 68-92 GHz receiver, one should repeat the AutoOOF about
every 3-4 hours. This means that the user should allow a 30 minute gap in the schedule
about every 3-4 hours. The user does not have to specify anything about an autoOOF
in the schedule; just allow the 30 minute gap. The operator or telescope friend will
do the calibration.
To figure the approximate move times, we can use the following
information:
For short moves, the telescope speed never reaches the maximum slew
rate, and the move times are shorter than the above estimate, as
listed in the following table.
Also see a Report
High Frequency (40-90 GHz) active surface considerations.
When using the 40-50 or 68-92 GHz receivers, one should tune up the active surface
by doing an "AutoOOF" procedure. This is so-called "Out of focus holography" in which
a strong point source is observed both in and out of focus, and large-scale
deviations of the surface can be derived. The surface corrections are applied
to the active surface model. This improves the aperture efficiency by a factor of 2
at 86 GHz. One should do an AutoOOF, which takes about 30 minutes, at the beginning
of any high-frequency observing. The user does not have to specify this in the
observing file; the operator or telescope friend will do an AutoOOF calibration
prior to starting the observing.
Telescope move times and limits.
This translates to about 24 seconds for acceleration and deceleration.
Adding software overhead, about 45 seconds should be
added to the travel time at the maximum slew rates.
Total move + settling time (sec) | ||
---|---|---|
Distance | T(AZ) | T(EL) |
< 0.2° | 12 | 10 |
0.5° | 20 | 16 |
1.0° | 25 | 20 |
1.5° | 27 | 23 |
2.0° | 30 | 27 |
Bad Weather Considerations
To get some idea of how often the low temperature condition happens,
refer to
Low Temperature statistics.
If your project will run in December, January, or February you should
use the slower azimuth slew rate of 18 deg/min when making the schedule.
In other months, the probability of running into the low temperature limits
is slight.
To write a schedule using the slower azimuth slew speed, specify the
GBT in your key file as: stations = gbt_cold ...
instead of the usual: stations = gbt_vlba ...