Re: Work units taking longer to crunch
Alfred A. Aburto Jr.
Tue, 18 Jun 2002 21:23:29 -0700
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The angle range is related to the number of degrees across the
sky the radio telescopes beam covered (related to Earth rotation rate and
slew rate of the telescope beam). When AR is low the telescope beam didn't move
much (pointed to nearly the same spot in the sky during that WU) and _all_ the
processing (FFT's) can be done. When AR is high (meaning the telescope beam
covered a large angle range (distance) across the sky during the WU) the
processing must be reduced (not all the FFT's can be completed) and thus run
time is reduced ...
Al
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, June 18, 2002 6:33
PM
Subject: Work units taking longer to
crunch
I've noticed that occasionally I get a work unit
that takes apporoximately twice as long to complete. I've checked my
setispy log and found that wu's that take longer to crunch have an "angle
range" that is lower/smaller then usual. Usual being >.4 The
more time consuming wu's are around .003 to .03 For the more
scientifically inclined...what does this mean.
Regards,
------------------------------------- Allan
Robbins Project Argus Station FM17dk
“Until they come to see us from their planet, I
wait patiently. I hear them saying: Don’t call us, we’ll call
you.” (Marlene Dietrich)
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