RFI

Radio Frequency Interference (RFI), both internally and externally generated, is an increasingly significant problem at VLBA sites, particularly at wavelengths of 18cm and longer. This page points you to information on known RFI at each VLBA antenna, current developments, and plans for handling the problem in the future.

This page is currently under development.
If an error is displayed next to a link, that plot is currently unavailable. VLBA RFI Survey (all sites)


  • RFI Listings A 2010 text file list of known RFI sources and frequencies at the VLA and VLBA.
  • RFI Memoranda VLA memoranda related to RFI.
  • Satellite Survey A Survey of Satellite Constellations that could effect RFI at the VLBA antennas.
  • World Radio Astronomy Frequency Allocations List of frequencies allocated and footnote-protected by the International Telecommunications Union--Search on "astronomy" in your .pdf viewer.

VLBA RFI Survey

The plots included here were created from RFI surveying with all 10 VLBA antennae. Frequencies surveyed are L through W bands, and the data was reduced on the date shown on the plot. If a VLBA station was not available during the survey period then that particular site does not appear on the plot (a previous survey might appear instead).

Most Current Plots

Note: No 7mm/3mm plots exist and only much older P-band plots are available (see below for those).

K-band (20.5-25.0 GHz)

U-band (11.9-16.0 GHz)

X-band (7.6-9.1 GHz)

C-band (3.9-8.1GHz)

S-band (1.8-2.6 GHz)

L-band (1.0-1.9GHz)

At Saint Croix an IF filter limits the L-band intermediate frequency from 665 MHz to 1000 MHz. Thus a VLBA sched file choice of the lower IF corresponds to a sky frequency pass of 1259-1435MHz. Choosing the higher IF corresponds to a sky frequency pass of 1400-1735MHz. For these RFI surveys, the lower IF was used for frequency 1191-1544 MHz, and the higher IF for 1559-1900 MHz.

Not So Old Plots:

Older plots with the same graphical display format as the current plots (above) are available. To get to the directories with this older rfi data, go here, and click on  the desired data set.  Near the bottom of  that directory's contents, there is a subdirectory called /website. Click on it to bring up the plots. The directory naming convention for older plots is as follows:

<band>i<year><month>, where band is l,s,c,x,u,k,q; year is 6=2016, 7=2017, etc., and month is 01=January, 02=February, etc. For example, a directory named xi606 contains rfi data for X-band taken June 2016.  Any subsequent letters or numbers refer to additional plots for a particular band, year and month.

 

(The following text currently only applies to the old P-band plots. More recent data in the other bands is being collected through the new digital back end system on the VLBA, not through the legacy BBC system.) Each plot is a series of spectral line observations stepped accross the entire band, thus a composite of a number of 16 MHz baseband autocorrelation spectra, overlapped by 0.5 MHz at each BBC end. The uneven noise level of the plots results from the VLBA baseband converter filter roll-off. The frequency resolution of the data is ~ 60 KHz. Since the survey ranges beyond the normal frequency limits of each band, those bands which have band-limiting filters will show reduced power levels at band extremities.

The amplitude scale is in normalized units of Tsys for each 16MHz baseband auto correlation spectra; i.e. in the absence of RFI, each 16MHz BBC output has a baseline floor equal to Tsys. With strong RFI present the surrounding baseline is suppressed such that the integral of the 16MHz BBC chunk is normalized; for example, a spike standing twice as high as the bandpass has a magnitude equal to about 2 * Tsys.

HOW TO READ THE OLD P-Band PLOTS

On the right side of each plot is a numerical list of VLBA stations, usually in order 1-10 running from the top of the plot to the bottom; the spectra corresponding to each VLBA station is also in descending order from the top of the plot to the bottom. Thus the uppermost spectra corresponds to the first VLBA station listed.

If you have access to the network at the AOC, the xmgr files from which these plots are created are available at /home/vlbiobs/VLBA_rfi/YYYYMMDD/band.xvgr, where YYYYMMDD is the date of the observation, and /band is the frequency band of interest. Using the xmgr files, one may zoom in to focus on particular frequencies, deactivate stations, change the amplitude scale, etc. If you do not have access to the NRAO AOC network, then you may FTP download gzip versions of the xmgr data files for these plots; to do so FTP to ftp.aoc.nrao.edu, login as "anonymous," use your full email address for your password; once connected go to the subdirectory /pub/staff/rarmenda, then download and gunzip the files. Click here for help on xmgr.

-Socorro IPG

 

Phi-band (.545-.665GHz)

Plow-band (.265-.385GHz)