[time-nuts] ADEV
Magnus Danielson
magnus at rubidium.dyndns.org
Sat Nov 13 16:29:51 UTC 2010
On 11/13/2010 04:53 PM, jimlux wrote:
> Magnus Danielson wrote:
> One of the big meetings on this topic was in the
>> NASA Goddard space center, and the result of that is found in the NASA
>> Special Publication 80 (SP-80):
>> http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19660001092
>>
>> Un the part 1 "User's viewpoint and requirements"
>> First article in there is "Short-term stability for a doppler radar:
>> Requirements, Measurements and Techniques" by D.B. Leeson and G.F.
>> Johnsson.
>> Fifth article is "Satellite Range and Tracking Accuracy as a function
>> of Oscillator STability" by J.J. Caldwell Jr.
>> Sixth article is "Short-term Stability Requirements for Deep Space
>> Tracking and Communications systems" by R. L. Sydnor.
>>
>
>
> Thanks for this reference.. I had seen some of the papers before, but
> this collects them all handy in one place.
>
> The paper by Sydnor is quite handy, because it's basically the same way
> we do things still (well, we don't punch the Doppler estimate on paper
> tape, we've moved a tiny bit forward. And, most, but not all, of our
> equipment is calibrated in Hz as opposed to cps)..
When researching my contributions to the Allan variance Wikipedia
article I found that many of the articles referred back to papers from
that conference, so I dug around a little and came up with that
reference. It is online from NASA if you just care to use their
web-pages a little.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_variance
I took some pride of providing significant contributions to the field as
referenced articles, and also as far as possible provide linkage to them
in online form, if possible to get for free. This was indeed one of the
references I was quite happy to find. I have not read all the 300 pages,
but there is a lot of good material in there. For instance, the DMTD
technique has a precursor in the cross-correlation technique being
presented on page 111 by R. F. C. Vessot, L. F. Mueller and J. Varnier
in "A cross-correlation technique for mesuring the short-term properties
of stable oscillators". They measure the beat frequencies of two
H-masers 1,420 GHz as being mixed down to first 30 MHz and then 600 Hz.
Oh, and I still have a number of things to properly cover on the Allan
variance article for sake of completeness. Progress have just been slow.
Doing exercises like these is however very rewarding as one needs to
learn the things on a deeper level.
Cheers,
Magnus
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