EOVSA Data Analysis Tutorial 2022

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Revision as of 14:52, 14 June 2022 by 100.35.108.93 (talk) (Created page with "=Browsing and Obtaining EOVSA data= thumb|right|500px|Browsing EOVSA data in RHESSI Browser Currently the most convenient way for browsing EOVSA data is through the [http://sprg.ssl.berkeley.edu/~tohban/browser/ RHESSI Browser]. First, check the "EOVSA Radio Data" box on the data selection area (top-left corner). Then select year/month/date to view the overall EOVSA dynamic spectrum. Note if a time is selected at early UTC hours (e.g., 0-3 UT),...")
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Browsing and Obtaining EOVSA data

Browsing EOVSA data in RHESSI Browser

Currently the most convenient way for browsing EOVSA data is through the RHESSI Browser. First, check the "EOVSA Radio Data" box on the data selection area (top-left corner). Then select year/month/date to view the overall EOVSA dynamic spectrum. Note if a time is selected at early UTC hours (e.g., 0-3 UT), it will show the EOVSA dynamic spectrum from the previous day. Also note that EOVSA data were not commissioned for spectroscopic imaging prior to April 2017. An example of the overview EOVSA dynamic spectrum for 2017 Aug 21 is shown in the figure on the right.

The overview EOVSA dynamic spectra are from the median of the uncalibrated cross-power visibilities at a few short baselines, which are not (but a good proxy of) the total-power dynamic spectra. The effects of spatial information blended in the cross-power visibilities can be clearly seen as the "U"-shaped features throughout the day, which are due to the movement of the Sun across the sky that effectively changes the length and orientation of the baselines. Flare times can be easily seen in the EOVSA dynamic spectra, which usually appear as vertical bright features across many frequency bands. More information can be found on this page.

We are currently working on a pipeline to create quicklook full-disk images for implementation at the RHESSI Browser in a way similar as the RHESSI quicklook images. Please stay tuned.

Once you identify the flare time, you can find the full-resolution (1-s cadence) uncalibrated visibility files (in Miriad format) at this link. Each data file is usually 10 minutes in duration. Name convention is YYYYMMDD/IDBYYYYMMDDHHMMSS, where the time in the file name indicates the start time of the visibility data.