On Tue, Dec 10, 2024 at 02:51 PM, Dave Typinski wrote:
I do not remember Nancay's file naming scheme -- do they name the files
1) with the date of the start of the observation like everyone else, or
2) with the date of the /end/ of the observation in an effort to confuse everyone, or
3) with whatever date takes up the greater portion of the spectrogram, to REALLY confuse everyone, including themselves?
It's #2, as you guessed! Up until now, when I examined my recordings in the morning, Nancay data was available with the current day's timestamp. This rules out the possibility that the date refers to the start of the spectrogram, because these times are still in the future in the morning.
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To make it a little more transparent: France and Germany are in the same time zone. Local midnight is one hour after UTC midnight.
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At this time of year, our data recording always starts in the evening of the previous day and ends in the early morning hours of the day shown in the Nancay timestamp. You can remember this by saying that the timestamp is on the right of the image and refers to the data to the right.
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At the moment, the Nancay images are being uploaded with a significant delay. The responsible employee is probably already on Christmas vacation and someone has to take over. Let's hope that nothing gets mixed up.
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Sabine
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Germany
Standard time: UTC +1 hour