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14.3 Data editing

Editing the interferometer data is not very flexible when done in the $ uv$ tables. If a problem occurs, is is not easily diagnosed since many of the parameters associated with the data acquisition are not present: atmospheric data, total powers, ... It is however useful when something strange occurs in the mapping process to do $ uv$ plots of the input table to look for the faulty data. Using time or scan number as X coordinate is recommended. One then may go back to the CLIC program and flag the faulty data, tag the corresponding scans, and keep a log of these problems so that they are not encountered again when the $ uv$ tables are reconstructed for any reason.

Two tasks have been written that may directly edit the data in $ uv$ tables:

UV_CLIP flags all visibilities larger than a given flux: this deletes visibility points with totally wrong numbers, if any.
UV_FLAG deletes visibility points in a given time interval for a given baseline.
Both tasks work by setting the corresponding weight to zero: their action is irreversible (you will have to reconstruct the $ uv$ table to go back).

The MAPPING program provides a more efficient, simpler and reversible interactive tool to flag parts of a $ uv$ data set (command UV_FLAG).


next up previous contents
Next: 14.4 Position shift Up: 14. Plane Analysis Previous: 14.2 data plots   Contents
Anne Dutrey