Averaging data in plotms

From CASA Guides
Revision as of 01:16, 19 February 2010 by Lchomiuk (talk | contribs) (Created page with 'You can average your measurement set on the fly with plotms. The '''averaging''' options can be found under the Data tab, and are mostly intuitive. [[File:spectrum-plottin…')
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search

You can average your measurement set on the fly with plotms. The averaging options can be found under the Data tab, and are mostly intuitive.


Plotms settings to produce the integrated spectrum from the calibrated visibilities data.

However, time averaging can be a little confusing, as it is controlled by three fields. If you click the checkbox next to Time under Averaging, a blank box with units of 'seconds' should become active, along with two checkboxes: Scan and Field. To the right, we've plotted two calibrator sources with no averaging. One is a phase calibrator observed in six scans, while the other is a brighter flux calibrator observed in one scan at the end of the observations.


Try setting the blank box to a very long time---let's say 50000 seconds---much longer than your total time observing. If you plot amplitude vs. time, you'll notice that not all of the data has been averaged together in time; in fact, only data within individual scans has been averaged together.


If you click on the Scan checkbox and replot your data, you should now see that the scans for the individual calibrators have been averaged together.


Finally, if for some reason, we'd like to average the two sources together in time, we click to make a checkmark in the Fields box. Now we get a plot like the one to the right; all data from both calibrators has been averaged to a single point in time.