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=== Series of small maps on 3C84 by JFL under poor conditions === == Series of small maps on 3C84 by JFL under poor conditions ==

Discussion on NIKA-2 beams

Page created by FXD, CK
Last updated by SL 2015-11-02, JFL 2015-11-07

Back to NIKA2 Run1 Main page

If not said otherwise, we measure the beam by using the middle scan of the 3-scans sequence launched with @beammap . These are 20'x20' maps done on-the-fly with 55"/sec scanning speed. Here, we show the best-of on 3 sources.

Beam maps on Mars

  • 20151030s73
    • Beam_Mars_20151030s73b.jpgBeam_Mars_20151030s73b_foot.jpg

      beam20151030s73.png

  • 20151031s88
    • Beam_Mars_20151031s88b.jpgBeam_Mars_20151031s88b_foot.jpg

      beam20151031s88.png

  • 20151028s103
    • Beam_Mars_20151028s103b.jpgBeam_Mars_20151028s103b_foot.jpg beam20151028s103.png

Beam maps on Uranus

  • 20151029s217
    • Beam_Uranus_20151029s217b.jpgBeam_Uranus_20151029s217b_foot.jpg

      beam20151029s217.png

  • 20151030s174
    • Beam_Uranus_20151030s174b.jpgBeam_Uranus_20151030s174b_foot.jpg

      beam20151030s174.png

Maps on 3C84

Beam maps

  • 20151030s51
    • Beam_3C84_20151030s51b.jpgBeam_3C84_20151030s51_foot.jpg

      beam20151030s51.png

Series of small maps on 3C84 by JFL under poor conditions

  • A short report on NIKA2 beamwidth using repeated observations of 3C84 at elevations between 52 and 73 deg in poor weather condition (tau_225 ~ 0.7).
  • Means and rms with 30 SMALL (5'x5' : nkotf 5 5 0/90/135/45 0 30 60 AZEL) on 3C84 (scans 20151104s21, s22, s23, scans 20151105s13, s14, s15, s16, s17, s19,

    • scans 20151106s15, 18, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41)

      • array

        FWHM

        uncert

        1

        12.03"

        +/-0.48"

        2

        19.37"

        +/-0.81"

        3

        11.84"

        +/-0.68"

  • Means and rms with only 3 LARGE otf (20'x20', nkotf 20 20 0/90/135/45 0 30 60 AZEL) on 3C84 (scans 20151105s18, s20, s21)

    • array

      FWHM

      uncert

      1

      13.18"

      +/-0.83"

      2

      19.71"

      +/-1.20"

      3

      12.97"

      +/-0.37"

* Means and rms with only 4 small, low velocity otf (5'x5', nkotf 5 5 0/90/135/45 0 15 30 AZEL) on 3C84 (scans 20151107s35, s37, s39, s41)

  • array

    FWHM

    uncert

    1

    11.57"

    +/-0.26"

    2

    19.05"

    +/-0.34"

    3

    11.47"

    +/-0.14"

  • Beams are about 20% wider than theoretical values. Beams are marginally smaller with smaller, low velocity maps. Beamwidth measurements with the four small, low velocity maps are very consistent resulting in small rms. Weather was very poor. [All maps are probably done after a focus on the central pixels. For larger maps, the outer pixels see the source, and as the outer pixels are less well focussed, the beam broadens. (CK)]

Preliminary findings

  • The main beam (the Gaussian part) seems with a normal width aka 11", 17" (but only in single-pixel analysis). Blind 2D Gaussian fits to the maps result in broader beams of 13", 19.5" (see Table below).
  • The quadrupod holding the secondary gives clear diffraction marks as a faint cross at about -30dB, visible in all Mars scans. Uranus and 3C83 are not bright enough to reach -30dB. To go deeper, we need Saturn or Jupiter maps.
  • In between, there is a large near-side lobe, especially at 2mm (but also visible at 1mm), that shows up as a rectangular pyramid-like shape at the 10% level, the origin of which is unknown. It seems to scale with wavelength. It was not so apparent in NIKA. Therefore the quality of the dichroic is not at the center of this issue.
    • In fact the rectangular shape of the first side lobe is known and expected from optical simulations (I didn't communicate about it until now). It is due to the combined diffraction on the primary mirror and the tetrapod holding the secondary mirror. However, the expected level of this side lobe is ~2% of the central peak when the focus is correct, and it increases to 10% if the defocus along the Z axis of M2 is ~0.7 mm. See the figure at the bottom of this page for more details. -SL-

  • For comparison, see the NIKA-1 beam maps in Fig.8 of Catalano+2014 and in Fig.8 of Monfardini+2011.

  • The following table shows the FWHMs derived from 2D-Gaussian fits to the observed emission.[Note that if the error beam is included in the fit, the main beam narrows down]
    • Source

      Date/Scan

      HPBW

      HPBW

      1mm

      2mm

      Mars

      20151030s73

      12.9

      19.3

      Mars

      20151031s88

      12.7

      19.6

      Uranus

      20151029s217

      14.5

      19.5

      Uranus

      20151030s174

      13.2

      19.7

      3C84

      20151030s51

      14.3

      19.4

  • Will redo the greg plots of the beams, together with 2D Gaussian fits, and create radial averages, once the coordinate problems in the IDL fits data have been solved. This is actually on the way. (CK 4-Nov-2015)

Maps seem too small ! Comment by RZ

It seems to me that one important problem was not taken into account while analysing the beams: the incorrect coordinates during roughly 2 sec at beginning of each subscan (see e.g. daily reports, Oct 29-30 and my other reports during the past runs). More recent examples are shown below.

antenna-20151106s17_azErrSu4.png antenna-20151106s17_azErrSu5.png

In blue are shown the available tracking errors, in white the correct values. How large is the error of the coordinates depends on the elevation and the scanning speed. For usable obs. parameters the values may reach even 30arcsec !

In such a case the general condition for map size in the scanning direction in case of not perfectly stable receiver:

mapSize = sizeOfSource + sizeOfFOV + base

must be changed to:

mapSize = sizeOfSource + sizeOfFOV + base + 2*sizeOfErrorZone

sizeOfSource is the diameter of the to be analysed error beam (read fron the attached figures 1 to 2arcmin), sizeOfFOV is 6.5arcmin, base should be at least 3*HPBW, sizeOfErrorZone is ~2sec*scanning velocity, i.e. ~2arcmin.

This shows that only the 20arcmin maps satisfy the above condition. For smaller maps the pixels which appear at map edges must be excluded from the analysis. As the array rotates with elev in (azim,elev) different pixels are affected. (RZ, 6-Nov-2015)

Theoretical beams from Zemax simulations (for comparison, SL 2015-11-02 and 04)

By design of the optics the image plane is as flat and aberration-less as possible, but for such a big FoV and given the constraint on the number of lenses we can't avoid that the optimal focus surface on the image plane has a residual bowl shape, which correspond to 0.4 mm amplitude of M2 along Z between the central pixel and an edge pixel (6.5'diameter ring). But the distance along the M2 Z axis between the best central and the best average is 0.2mm (= best at the 4' diameter ring). As a consequence there's a Strehl ratio (~beam peak amplitude) variation of 10% at 1.2mm and 4% at 2mm along the FoV if the focus is on the central pixel, but these values are reduced to less than 3% at 1.2mm and less than 1% at 2mm if the focus is on the 4' diameter ring.

The images below show the 1mm band beam shape in false color and logarithmic scale, and a cross section in linear scale, for the central pixel (top) and an edge pixel (bottom) for various position of the focus (note the 2mm band beam shape is identical to the 1mm beam, but it is larger and twice less sensitive to the focus variation). For the best central focus and best average focus I also added some plots of the Strehl ratio along the FOV on the X axis of the image plane from 0 to 3.25' radius. As you can see in any case we are still significantly above the diffraction limit; in the worst case of 10% decrease of the Strehl ratio (e.i. focus on the central pixel), we convolve a 0.2 mm radius aberration spot with a 1.7 mm radius Airy pattern for the central pixel and a 0.8 mm radius aberration spot with a 1.7 mm radius Airy pattern for the edge pixel, while the aberration spot variation is at most +/- 0.1 mm on the image plane for the best average focus. Thus, the beams are always acceptable to maintain the angular resolution, but less optimal in terms of contrast on the image (e.i. dynamic, e.i. gain) if we focus on the central pixel versus the best average focus.

  1. Focus optimized on the central pixel:

    [ATTACH] Beams_NIKA2_Strehl_alongX_central_pixel_focus_1mm_band.PNG

  2. Focus optimized on the 4'FOV ring = best overall focus on the array = best central + 0.2 mm:

    [ATTACH] Beams_NIKA2_Strehl_alongX_best_average_focus_1mm_band.PNG

  3. Defocus: best central - 0.5 mm:

    [ATTACH]

  4. Defocus: best central + 0.5 mm:

    [ATTACH]

  5. Defocus: best overall + 0.5 mm:

    [ATTACH]

OffProcNika2Run1Beam (last edited 2017-08-08 08:26:51 by NikaBolometer)