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Currently, I think we just assume that we get all the packets. This means that if some packets are lost (which we have occasionally seen; we aren't sure about the root cause but it seem to be fixed by rebooting an X engine) we effectively have a flux scale change in the data that can be freq/time dependent. If we knew how many packets went into an integration, we would be able to back out what happened, track X engine health, and potentially restore a consistent flux scale by dividing out by the packet count.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
In general, our RFI algorithms pick this up pretty well. Here's an example from the next day where those x-engines outright die toward the end of the night, but show periodic wonky behavior for the entire night.
Currently, I think we just assume that we get all the packets. This means that if some packets are lost (which we have occasionally seen; we aren't sure about the root cause but it seem to be fixed by rebooting an X engine) we effectively have a flux scale change in the data that can be freq/time dependent. If we knew how many packets went into an integration, we would be able to back out what happened, track X engine health, and potentially restore a consistent flux scale by dividing out by the packet count.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: