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Newsletter #19 February 25, 2003 |
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| Testing receiver performance using system temperature graphs |
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To assure ourselves that the receiver is running properly, SETI@home checks its system temperature on a daily basis. We interpret high system temperatures as a warning; higher temperatures interfere with the receiver's ability to detect signals and can be due to either a hardware failure of some kind or interference from an external source (such as RFI).
Every day we monitor system temperature by downloading and plotting chunks of sample data from Arecibo. (This data is sampled from our hydrogen survey.
Similar to other graphs from our hydrogen survey (from Newsletter 18, for example), the x-axis represents velocity relative to our solar system; negative velocities represent hydrogen moving away from us while positive velocities represent hydrogen moving toward us. The y-axis represents system temperature, which increases as noise and/or signal detections increase. We expect a hump close to a velocity of zero, because most detected hydrogen moves at slow rates relative to the solar system. The red data is from SETI@home's data recorder, while the green line represents data from the LDS hydrogen survey. (The Leiden-Dingeloo Survey (LDS), published in 1997, is the most complete hydrogen survey to date.) We compare our data with the LDS data to affirm that nothing unusual is happening. The next graph is from a day earlier (February 2, 2003). The volatile fluctuation of the red line indicates that there was a problem on this dayin this case, a radar transmission was broadcast from Arecibo, generating noise loud enough to drown out our ability to detect data:
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