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Ulysses Unified Radio and Plasma wave (URAP) Radio Astronomy Receiver (RAR) 144 Second Data

ResourceID
spase://NASA/NumericalData/Ulysses/URAP/GSFC/SPDF/RAR/CDF/PT144S

Description

This data set contains 144 second averages of the electric field intensities from the Unified Radio and Plasma Wave Instrument Radio Astronomy Receiver. Units are microVolt/Hz**0.5 measured at the receiver input terminals. To convert to electric field strength the given data must be divided by the effective length of the antenna. This is complicated by the fact that the effective length depends on the antenna impedance which is affected by the plasma conditions local to the Ulysses spacecraft. The impedance will also depend on the frequency. In general, the RAR frequency channels that are well above the local electron plasma frequency are not affected by the plasma conditions and the effective length of 23 meters can be used. When the RAR is in summed, rather than separate, mode the determination of field strengths is even more difficult. The time period of 144 seconds was used for the averaging period because that is the basic cycling time of the instrument. The RAR continually cycles through a list of frequencies. There are 16 lists and the list currently in use is chosen by telecommand. The time period to complete the list is 144 seconds for the high band of the receiver (for telemetry bit rates of 1024 and 512 bps, the cycle time is 64 seconds for bit rates of 256 and 128 bps), after which the instrument begins with the list again. Therefore this period was chosen for the averaging period. Notes on the Radio Astronomy Receiver from URAP User Notes http://helio.esa.int/ulysses/archive/urap_un.html The Radio Astronomy Receiver is divided into two parts, a low frequency receiver and a high frequency receiver. The low frequency receiver has 64 channels that cover the frequency range from 1.25 to 48.0 kHz in linear steps of 0.75 kHz. The high frequency receiver has 12 channels that cover the range from 52 kHz to 940 kHz in approximately logarithmic steps. The high frequency receiver is usually operated in what is called "measure" mode, which causes the receiver to step repeatedly through a list of frequencies that is determined by a ROM on board the spacecraft. There are 16 different lists and one of them is chosen by telecommand. The different lists emphasize different frequency ranges, so as to maximize the information received depending on the type of phenomena being studied. Some of the lists include all 12 possible frequency channels while other lists skip some of the frequencies. The list that has been used for most of the mission does include all frequecies, but there may be times when other lists have been used. At these times only a subset of the frequencies will be present. The low frequency receiver can be operated in measure mode (with its own set of lists of 8 or 16 frequencies) or in "linear sweep" mode where it steps through a contiguous set of frequencies. In linear mode, all 64 frequencies can be stepped through, or a subset of 32 frequencies can be chosen using the lower half, middle half, or upper half of the frequencies. For most of the mission, the low frequency receiver has been operated in linear mode with all 64 frequencies but there have been periods when it has operated in measure mode or in in linear mode with less than 64 frequencies. During these periods only a subset (8, 16, or 32) of the 64 possible frequencies will appear. Besides the intensity of a signal reaching the spacecraft, the RAR can also, when operated in particular modes, determine additional information about the source of the radiation, including its direction relative to the location of Ulysses, its angular size, and its polarization. This is most efficiently done with the signal from the X and Z axis antennas summed together electronically either with or without a phase shift added between the two signals. Although this additional information cannot be recovered from the averaged data, the mode does have a large effect on the background signal level, so the mode of high and low frequency receivers is given in the data as either summed (X and Z antenna combined) or separate (X antenna alone). Reference: Astron. Astrophys. Suppl. Ser., 92(2), 291-316 (1992).

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Version:2.3.2

NumericalData

ResourceID
spase://NASA/NumericalData/Ulysses/URAP/GSFC/SPDF/RAR/CDF/PT144S
ResourceHeader
ResourceName
Ulysses Unified Radio and Plasma wave (URAP) Radio Astronomy Receiver (RAR) 144 Second Data
AlternateName
Ulysses Unified Radio and Plasma Wave Experiment - Radio Astronomy Receiver 144 Second Resolution Data
AlternateName
UY_M0_R144
ReleaseDate
2021-04-27 15:38:11Z
Description

This data set contains 144 second averages of the electric field intensities from the Unified Radio and Plasma Wave Instrument Radio Astronomy Receiver. Units are microVolt/Hz**0.5 measured at the receiver input terminals. To convert to electric field strength the given data must be divided by the effective length of the antenna. This is complicated by the fact that the effective length depends on the antenna impedance which is affected by the plasma conditions local to the Ulysses spacecraft. The impedance will also depend on the frequency. In general, the RAR frequency channels that are well above the local electron plasma frequency are not affected by the plasma conditions and the effective length of 23 meters can be used. When the RAR is in summed, rather than separate, mode the determination of field strengths is even more difficult. The time period of 144 seconds was used for the averaging period because that is the basic cycling time of the instrument. The RAR continually cycles through a list of frequencies. There are 16 lists and the list currently in use is chosen by telecommand. The time period to complete the list is 144 seconds for the high band of the receiver (for telemetry bit rates of 1024 and 512 bps, the cycle time is 64 seconds for bit rates of 256 and 128 bps), after which the instrument begins with the list again. Therefore this period was chosen for the averaging period. Notes on the Radio Astronomy Receiver from URAP User Notes http://helio.esa.int/ulysses/archive/urap_un.html The Radio Astronomy Receiver is divided into two parts, a low frequency receiver and a high frequency receiver. The low frequency receiver has 64 channels that cover the frequency range from 1.25 to 48.0 kHz in linear steps of 0.75 kHz. The high frequency receiver has 12 channels that cover the range from 52 kHz to 940 kHz in approximately logarithmic steps. The high frequency receiver is usually operated in what is called "measure" mode, which causes the receiver to step repeatedly through a list of frequencies that is determined by a ROM on board the spacecraft. There are 16 different lists and one of them is chosen by telecommand. The different lists emphasize different frequency ranges, so as to maximize the information received depending on the type of phenomena being studied. Some of the lists include all 12 possible frequency channels while other lists skip some of the frequencies. The list that has been used for most of the mission does include all frequecies, but there may be times when other lists have been used. At these times only a subset of the frequencies will be present. The low frequency receiver can be operated in measure mode (with its own set of lists of 8 or 16 frequencies) or in "linear sweep" mode where it steps through a contiguous set of frequencies. In linear mode, all 64 frequencies can be stepped through, or a subset of 32 frequencies can be chosen using the lower half, middle half, or upper half of the frequencies. For most of the mission, the low frequency receiver has been operated in linear mode with all 64 frequencies but there have been periods when it has operated in measure mode or in in linear mode with less than 64 frequencies. During these periods only a subset (8, 16, or 32) of the 64 possible frequencies will appear. Besides the intensity of a signal reaching the spacecraft, the RAR can also, when operated in particular modes, determine additional information about the source of the radiation, including its direction relative to the location of Ulysses, its angular size, and its polarization. This is most efficiently done with the signal from the X and Z axis antennas summed together electronically either with or without a phase shift added between the two signals. Although this additional information cannot be recovered from the averaged data, the mode does have a large effect on the background signal level, so the mode of high and low frequency receivers is given in the data as either summed (X and Z antenna combined) or separate (X antenna alone). Reference: Astron. Astrophys. Suppl. Ser., 92(2), 291-316 (1992).

Acknowledgement
Please acknowledge the Principal Investigator, R J MacDowall, of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA, and Mike Lancaster and Cecil Tranquille of the Ulysses Data System, ESA/ESTEC, Noordwijk, NL
Contacts
RolePersonStartDateStopDateNote
1.PrincipalInvestigatorspase://SMWG/Person/Robert.J.MacDowall
2.TechnicalContactspase://SMWG/Person/Roger.A.Hess
InformationURL
Name
Ulysses URAP Instrument Page at NASA/GSFC
URL
Description

Ulysses URAP Instrument page maintained by NASA GSFC with URAP data plotting tools, Data Access, Publication lists, Team member lists, documents, and related links sections

Language
en
InformationURL
Name
Ulysses URAP Instrument Page at ESA
URL
Language
en
PriorIDs
spase://VWO/NumericalData/Ulysses/URAP/Ulysses_RAR_PT144S
spase://VWO/NumericalData/Ulysses/URAP/RAR.CDF.PT144S
spase://VSPO/NumericalData/Ulysses/URAP/GSFC/SPDF/RAR/CDF/PT144S
AccessInformation
RepositoryID
Availability
Online
AccessRights
Open
AccessURL
Name
FTPS from SPDF (not with most browsers)
URL
Description

FTP access to repository of Ulysses/URAP RAR 144 CDFs at NASA CDAWeb.Name of the data resource: UY_M0_R144

Language
en
AccessURL
Name
HTTPS from SPDF
URL
Description

In CDF via HTTP from SPDF

AccessURL
Name
CDAWeb
URL
ProductKey
UY_M0_R144
Description

Repository of Ulysses/URAP RAR data in CDF format at NASA CDAWeb, accessible via web interface. Name of the data resource: UY_M0_R144.

Language
en
Format
CDF
Encoding
None
Acknowledgement
Please acknowledge the Principal Investigator, R J MacDowall, of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA, and Mike Lancaster and Cecil Tranquille of the Ulysses Data System, ESA/ESTEC, Noordwijk, NL
AccessInformation
RepositoryID
Availability
Online
AccessRights
Open
AccessURL
Name
CDAWeb HAPI Server
URL
Style
HAPI
ProductKey
UY_M0_R144
Description

Web Service to this product using the HAPI interface.

Format
CSV
Acknowledgement
Please acknowledge the Principal Investigator, R J MacDowall, of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA, and Mike Lancaster and Cecil Tranquille of the Ulysses Data System, ESA/ESTEC, Noordwijk, NL
ProcessingLevel
Calibrated
InstrumentIDs
MeasurementType
Waves.Passive
MeasurementType
ElectricField
TemporalDescription
TimeSpan
StartDate
1990-11-03 19:30:00Z
StopDate
2007-11-26 18:30:00Z
Cadence
PT144S
SpectralRange
RadioFrequency
ObservedRegion
Heliosphere.Inner
ObservedRegion
Heliosphere.Outer
ObservedRegion
Jupiter
ObservedRegion
Sun.Corona
Caveats
Ulyssses URAP Interference and other issues affecting data interpretation - see Ulysses URAP - Interference and other issues affecting data interpretation http://vwo.nasa.gov/urap/URAP_InterpretationIssues/urap_interpretation.html and URAP - User Notes http://ulysses-ops.esa.int/ulysses/archive/urap_un.html
Keywords
Dynamic Spectrogram
Spectrogram
Solar radio burst
Jovian Kilometric Radiation
KOM
bKOM
Jovian Hectometric Radiation
HOM
Type II Solar radio burst
Type III Solar radio burst
UHR
Upper hybrid resonance
VLF Emissions
ULF Emissions
Whistler
Parameter #1
Name
Time in NSSDC Epoch format
ParameterKey
Epoch
Units
ms
Support
SupportQuantity
Temporal
Parameter #2
Name
Time in PB5 format
ParameterKey
Time_PB5
Structure
Size
3
Element
Name
year
Index
1
Units
year
ValidMin
1990
ValidMax
2007.0
Element
Name
day of year
Index
2
Units
day
ValidMin
0
ValidMax
365
Element
Name
ms of day
Index
3
Units
ms
ValidMin
0.0
ValidMax
8.64E+07
Support
SupportQuantity
Temporal
Parameter #3
Name
Ulysses Mission Time
ParameterKey
UMT
Description

Ulysses Mission Time in days elapsed since 06-Oct-1990

Units
days
Support
SupportQuantity
Temporal
Parameter #4
Name
Low frequency polarization mode
ParameterKey
Lo_pol_mode
Description

Low frequency polarization mode (1: on, 2: off, 3: switched, 4: unknown)

ValidMin
1
ValidMax
4
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #5
Name
Low frequency summation mode
ParameterKey
Lo_sum_mode
Description

Low frequency summation mode (1: on, 2: off, 3: switched, 4: unknown)

ValidMin
1
ValidMax
4
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #6
Name
High frequency polarization mode
ParameterKey
Hi_pol_mode
Description

High frequency polarization mode (1: on, 2: off, 3: switched, 4: unknown)

ValidMin
1
ValidMax
4
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #7
Name
High frequency summation mode
ParameterKey
Hi_sum_mode
Description

High frequency summation mode (1: on, 2: off, 3: switched, 4: unknown)

Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #8
Name
Telemetry bit rate
ParameterKey
IBPS
Description

Telemetry bit rate (1: 128, 2: 256, 3: 512, 4: 1024 bps, 5: changed, 6: unknown)

ValidMin
1
ValidMax
6
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #9
Name
RAR Channel Frequencies (kHz)
ParameterKey
Chan_Freq
Description

RAR Channel Frequencies (kHz)

Units
kHz
Structure
Size
76
ValidMin
1.0
ValidMax
1000.0
Support
SupportQuantity
Other
Parameter #10
Name
RAR Electric field intensity
ParameterKey
Intensity
Description

RAR Electric field intensity in 76 channels

Units
microVolt/Hz**0.5
ValidMin
0.01
ValidMax
100.0
Wave
WaveType
PlasmaWaves
WaveQuantity
ACElectricField
FrequencyRange
SpectralRange
RadioFrequency
Low
1.25
High
940
Units
kHz