Contrarily to a common idea, determining the absolute flux scale in an interferometric project is the hardest and finest task of the calibration. Furthermore the CLIC command SOLVE FLUX is very dangerous, particularly when used on bad calibrated data.
This command permits the determination of the absolute flux scale which is fixed by the CLIC command STORE.
During this step, all parameters which can vary in time have a critical
influence on the quality of the final results: POINTING, FOCUS, weather
(amplitude and phase noise) and can introduce somes biases. POINTING errors
are the most important but can be easily cancelled by pointing before doing
the cross-correlations on the RF AND the PHASE CALIBRATOR. The evolution in
time of the phase noise is most difficult to cancel. For example, a phase
noise fluctuation from 15 to 30
between the RF bandpass calibrator
and the phase calibrator introduces on the efficiencies estimates a
variation of about
5.5 %.
In order to avoid them, the best solution is to apply the SOLVE FLUX
command only on a short time interval where the weather conditions: HO
vapor contents and phase noise are similar (compare the CALIBRATIONS).
In standard interferometric projects, we find the following data:
- POINTING on RF Bandpass Calibrator - CROSS-CORELATION on RF Bandpass Calibrator (typically 1/4h) - POINTINGS on Phase Calibrator (each 2h) - CROSS-CORELATION (by 4min) on Phase Calibrator
We us them to determine the absolute flux scale. Depending of the flux of the amplitude (phase) calibrator, there are several possibilities.