Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
To asses stability against 1/ f noise, the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) on-board
the Planck mission will acquire data at a rate much higher than the data rate allowed by the science telemetry bandwith of 35.5 Kbps. The data are processed by an on-board pipeline, followed onground
by a decoding and reconstruction step, to reduce the volume of data to a level compatible
with the bandwidth while minimizing the loss of information. This paper illustrates the on-board
processing of the scientific data used by Planck/LFI to fit the allowed data-rate, an intrinsecally
lossy process which distorts the signal in a manner which depends on a set of five free parameters
(Naver, r1, r2, q, O) for each of the 44 LFI detectors. The paper quantifies the level of distortion
introduced by the on-board processing as a function of these parameters. It describes the method
of tuning the on-board processing chain to cope with the limited bandwidth while keeping to a
minimum the signal distortion. Tuning is sensitive to the statistics of the signal and has to be
constantly adapted during flight. The tuning procedure is based on a optimization algorithm applied
to unprocessed and uncompressed raw data provided either by simulations, pre-launch tests
or data taken in flight from LFI operating in a special diagnostic acquisition mode. All the needed
optimization steps are performed by an automated tool, OCA2, which simulates the on-board processing,
explores the space of possible combinations of parameters, and produces a set of statistical
indicators, among them: the compression rate Cr and the processing noise ?Q. For Planck/LFI it
is required that Cr = 2.4 while, as for other systematics, ?Q would have to be less than 10% of
rms of the instrumental white noise. An analytical model is developed that is able to extract most
of the relevant information on the processing errors and the compression rate as a function of the
signal statistics and the processing parameters to be tuned. This model will be of interest for the
instrument data analysis to asses the level of signal distortion introduced in the data by the onboard
processing. The method was applied during ground tests when the instrument was operating
in conditions representative of flight. Optimized parameters were obtained and inserted in the onboard
processor and the performance has been verified against the requirements with the result that
the required data rate of 35.5 Kbps has been achieved while keeping the processing error at a level
of 3.8% of the instrumental white noise and well below the target 10% level.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Data compression; On-board data handling; Space instrumentation; Instruments for CMB observations
Elenco autori:
D'Arcangelo, Ocleto
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