![]() |
The narrow-band correlator accepts as input two signals of 1GHz
bandwidth, that must be selected within the 3.6GHz delivered by the
receiver. In practice, the IF processor splits
the two input 4.2-7.8GHz bands in four 1GHz ``quarters'', labeled
Q1...Q4 (see Fig. ). Two of these quarters must be
selected as narrow-band correlator inputs. The system allows the
following choices:
where HOR and VER refers to the two polarizations:
Quarter | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 |
IF1 [GHz] | 4.2 - 5.2 | 5.0 - 6.0 | 6.0 - 7.0 | 6.8 - 7.8 |
input 1 | HOR | HOR | VER | VER |
input 2 | VER | VER | HOR | HOR |
Note, that the combination VER VER is not allowed.
How to observe two polarizations? To observe simultaneously two
polarizations at the same sky frequency, one must select the same
quarter (Q1 or Q2 or Q3 or Q4) for the two narrow-band correlator
entries. This will necessarily result in each entry seeing a different
polarization. The system thus gives access to 1GHz 2
polarizations.
How to use the full 2GHz bandwidth? If two different quarters
are selected (any combination except VER VER is possible), a bandwidth
of 2GHz can be analyzed by the narrow-band correlator. Only one
polarization per quarter is available in that case; this may or may
not be the same polarization for the two chunks of 1GHz.
Is there any overlap between the four quarters? In fact, the
four available quarters are 1GHz wide each, but with a small overlap
between some of them: Q1 is 4.2 to 5.2GHz, Q2 is 5.0 to 6.0GHz, Q3 is
6.0 to 7.0GHz, and Q4 is 6.8 to 7.8GHz. This results from the combination
of filters and LOs used in the IF processor.
Is the 2GHz bandwidth necessarily contiguous? No: any
combination (except VER VER) of two quarters can be selected. Adjacent
quarters will result in a (quasi) continuous 1.8-2GHz
band. Non-adjacent quarters will result in two separate 1GHz
bands.
Where is the selected sky frequency in the IF band? It would be natural to tune the receivers such that the selected sky frequency corresponds to the middle of the IF bandwidth, i.e. 6.0GHz. However, this corresponds to the limit between Q2 and Q3. If your project depends on the narrow-band correlator, it is therefore highly recommended to center a line at the center of a quarter (see Section ``ASTRO'' below). In all bands, the receivers offer best performance in terms of receiver noise and sideband rejection in Q3 (i.e. the line should be centered at an IF1 frequency of 6500 MHz).