Once-Asked Questions ==================== Q: I don't have *numpy*. What do I do? --------------------------------------- "import error: no module named numpy" A: Disable things that require numpy. ------------------------------------- Some parts of the code need the "numpy" python package. To disable things that need numpy:: solve-field --no-remove-lines --uniformize 0 [....usual arguments...] Q: Is there a way to plot a grid of RA and Dec on the images? ------------------------------------------------------------- A: Yes ------ You'll have to run the "plot-constellations" program separately. For example, if you have an image 1.jpg and WCS 1.wcs: jpegtopnm 1.jpg | plot-constellations -w 1.wcs -o grid.png -i - -N -C -G 60 will plot an RA,Dec grid with 60-arcminute spacings. Unfortunately they're not labelled... [Note, see *plotann.py* also for more annotation options.] Q: Is there a way to get out the center of the image (RA,Dec) and pixel scale of the image? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A: Yes, with the *wcsinfo* program ---------------------------------- Yes, run the "wcsinfo" program on a WCS file -- it prints out a bunch of stats, in a form that's meant to be easy to parse by programs (so it's not particularly friendly for people). "ra_center" and "dec_center" (in degrees) and "pixscale" (in arcsec/pixel) are what you want. Q: Is there a way to plot N and E vectors on the image? ------------------------------------------------------- A: Not yet. ----------- Q: Is there a way to plot a list of your own objects on the image by inputing RA,Dec? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A: Check out *plotann.py*, or try these older instructions... ------------------------------------------------------------- Yes -- but it's roundabout... First, project your RA,Dec objects into pixel x,y positions: wcs-rd2xy -w 1.wcs -i your-objs.rd -o your-objs.xy Then plot them over the image (or annotated image). There's not currently a way to label them. : pngtopnm grid.png | plotxy -i your-objs.xy -I - -x 1 -y 1 -s X -C green -b black > objs.png The "-x 1 -y 1" compensate for the fact that FITS calls the center of the first pixel (1,1) rather than (0,0). Q: Would your code work on all-sky images? ------------------------------------------ A: Not very well ---------------- We assume a TAN projection, so all-sky images typically don't work, but it should certainly be possible with a bit of tweaking, since all-sky is really a much easier recognition problem! One thing you can try, if your image is big enough, is to cut out a small section near the middle. Q: I want to build an index from my own catalog. How do I proceed? ------------------------------------------------------------------- A: See :ref:`genindex` ----------------------