Bibcode
Gómez-Reñasco, F.; Aguiar-González, M.; Herreros, J. M.; Hoyland, R. J.; Sánchez de la Rosa, V.; Vega-Moreno, A.; Viera-Curbelo, T.; Génova-Santos, R.; López-Caraballo, C.; Rebolo, R.; Rubiño-Martín, J. A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy VI. Proceedings of the SPIE, Volume 8452, id. 845234-845234-10 (2012).
Fecha de publicación:
9
2012
Número de citas
4
Número de citas referidas
2
Descripción
The QUIJOTE-CMB experiment has been described in previous publications.
Here we describe the architecture of the control system, hardware and
software, of the QUIJOTE I instrument (MFI). It is a multi-channel
instrument with five separate polarimeters: two of which operate at
10-14 GHz, two of which operate at 16-20 GHz, and a central polarimeter
at 26-36 GHz. Each polarimeter can rotate at a speed of up to 1 Hz and
also can move to discrete angular positions which allow the linear polar
parameters Q, U and I to be derived. The instrument is installed in an
alt-azimuth telescope which implements several operational modes:
movement around the azimuth axis at a constant velocity while the
elevation axis is held at a fixed elevation; tracking of a sky object;
and raster of a rectangular area both in horizontal and sky coordinates.
The control system of both, telescope and instrument, is based in the
following technologies: an LXI-VXI bus is used for the signal
acquisition system; an EtherCAT bus implements software PLCs developed
in TwinCAT to perform the movement of the 5 polarimeters and the 2 axes
of the telescope. Science signal, angular positions of the 5
polarimeters and telescope coordinates are sampled at up to 4000 Hz. All
these data are correlated by a time stamp obtained from an external GPS
clock implementing the Precise Time Protocol-1588 which provides
synchronization to less than 1 microsecond. The control software also
acquires housekeeping (HK) from the different subsystems. LabVIEW
implements the instrument user interface.