Hi!
Here's the H-line data I captured from my 2.4m dish station in a 21-hour drift scan. I've attached an interactive 3D HTML plot you can rotate, zoom, and hover to see RA, Dec, frequency, and Doppler velocity for each point, along with plot images.
You can see the RA progression in the plot corresponding to each hydrogen peak as the Milky Way drifted through the beam.
There's little to no RFI in the raw data now. I'll do longer observations soon and share the results.
I'll optimize the data processing and plotting in the coming days.
System details:
Hardware: Airspy Mini
Software: VIRGO-based script
Feed: Cantenna with SAWbird H1 LNA
System: Raspberry Pi 500, fully remote operation





I'll also create a Zenodo page so the data is properly archived and verifiable if I find anything unusual.
Thanks.

Hi Alex,
Stacking multiple days should improve SNR, and it also helps with transient detection since any unusual signals would stand out. Real astronomical signals should repeat, while RFI won’t.
I visit the site every 2 months, so I’ll change the pointing to a different declination on my next visit. My long-term goal is to set up 3-4 dishes of 2m or larger for SETI observations. A motorized remote control mount would be nice, but for a dish this size I’d need to build one myself. By the way I think for smaller dishes like DD and WiFi dish Discovery Drive motorized mount should be available soon as per the discovery dish web page,
Regarding the better plot, yes, I captured the data but haven’t processed it yet. I’ll process yesterday’s data soon and share. Did you get a chance to look at the 3D HTML plot?
Thanks.
On 11 Feb 2026, at 06:27, 'b alex pettit jr' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Ayushman,Why are you taking 24/7 scans of the same region ?What changes from day to day ?Do you have a better plot of this.There seems to be an unusual pattern in the background .
<1770771252570blob.jpg>
Alex
On Tuesday, February 10, 2026 at 07:16:52 PM EST, Ayushman Tripathi <ayushmantr...@gmail.com> wrote:Hi Alex,
Thank you! Yes, I'll do 24/7 drift scans since the dish is fixed pointing and I'm obtaining the data remotely. I can visit once every ~2 months to adjust the pointing. The good thing is there's not even a single RFI spike visible in the raw data as I turned off even any light bulbs.I'll also create a Zenodo page so the data is properly archived and verifiable if I find anything unusual.
Thanks.
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Hi Alex,
Stacking multiple days should improve SNR, and it also helps with transient detection since any unusual signals would stand out. Real astronomical signals should repeat, while RFI won’t.





Hi Stephen,
Thanks! Yes, it'll help a lot for DD and WiFi dishes, as we can remotely control them then.



Hi Alex,
Those appear to be 3D rendering artifacts from matplotlib's 3D rendering. I'm working on fixing that.
Interestingly, when I plot the same data using Plotly (WebGL-based), those tiny squares don't appear.
Thanks.
You can find the whole 3D Plot attached here: https://www.icloud.com/iclouddrive/0f4xYAqp0Xkwf6xu4eDn7l2MQ#hline%5F3d%5Finteractive_2




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Hi Alex,
Yes, looks like it. I'll make sure the AGC stays off, it should be off already, but I'll double-check.
Thanks.
Hi Peet,
Thank You. Yes, as Alex mentioned, the plot is still in the topocentric frame. I’ll apply the VLSR correction and compare the result.
Hi Alex,
The artifact that appeared similar to automatic gain control (AGC) effect from the SDR was actually caused by the baseline correction. I’ve corrected it and will share a few days of VLSR-corrected averaged data soon.
I’ll also upload the data to GitHub weekly.
Also next month I’ll move my DD feed to the same remote location where the 2.4 m dish is installed, and use a 1.5 m solid dish instead of the WiFi dish as that place doesn't have RFI problem.
Thanks