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Asimov,
I believe you have misinterpreted the geometry. The detector array is some distance behind the aperture array, perhaps one meter or more. The concept is that of a simple shadow mask. There are 52000 shadows on 32000 detectors, so the details of the computation are probably a bit complex. I recommend a paper by Scott Barthelmy, which is available at http://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/swif...SBarthelmy.pdf 73, Gene W4SZ Asimov wrote: Hi, Say, I've got a question about something I've read about the Swift gamma ray detection satellite. It's detector consisted of an antenna composed of 52,000 lead blocks arranged by computer generated pseudo-random locations and glued to the back of a sheet of 4x8 plywood. The actual detectors where located in the spaces between the blocks. It wasn't mentioned but I think these were probably crystals which give off a pulse of electricity every time they are struck by a gamma ray. Anyways my question is, in your opinion, what is the purpose of the pseudo random arrangement of this "apperture mask" antenna? I suspect it has something statistical related to the nature of ambient noise signals. I tried making a pc simulation of this but I get the same answer whether the array is in rows or pseudo-random. I tried with noise but I saw no reduction. I haven't tried adding a signal to the noise in the simulation yet though... A*s*i*m*o*v ... Three types of lies: lies, damn lies, and statistics - Mark Twain. |