Usage

The Goodman Spectroscopic Pipeline is designed to be simple to use, however simple does not always is the best case for everyone, thus The Goodman Pipeline is also flexible.

Getting Help.

This manual is intended to be the prefered method to get help. However the quickest option is using -h or --help

redccd --help

Will print the list of arguments along with a quick explanation and default values.

It is the same for redspec

redspec --help

Observing Guidelines

In order to be able to process your data with the Goodman Spectroscopic Pipeline you need to follow some guidelines, we do not intend to tell you how to do your science. Here are some basic hints.

  • Make sure you have a good observing plan as well as a good backup plan too.

  • Put special attention to the calibration files that are needed for the data that you are planning to obtain, for instance, you can process your spectroscopic data without bias because using overscan will give you a good enough approximation, but Imaging does not have overscan therefore you MUST obtain bias frames.

  • Keep a detailed log of things that happened while you were observing, mistakes that you made, exposures repeated, etc. An observing log is not an extraction of header information. Well, it can be, but it will be useless.

  • If you are unsure about the required steps to achieve your science goals ask your PI, not the support scientist, Her/His job is to assist you on how to get good quality data not what data you need in order to achieve your scientific goals.

For using the pipeline you don’t need to use any special file naming convention, in fact all the information is obtained from the headers. As of version 1.2.0 you need to use a reference lamp naming convention though. Not the file but the field that goes into OBJECT. It is actually very simple:

Convention names for comparison lamps

Lamp name

Convention

Argon

Ar

Neon

Ne

Copper

CuHeAr

Iron

FeHeAr

Mercury Argon

HgAr

Mercury Argon Neon

HgArNe

This is to ensure the pipeline is able to recognize them. This will no be the case in future versions but for now this is how it works.

Observing for Radial Velocity

Radial velocity measurements are possible with the Goodman High Throughput Spectrograph but you have to be careful. A very detailed description of the procedures and what you can expect was prepared and is available HERE.

Please read it carefully so you don’t find any surprises when trying to reduce your data.

Prepare Data for Reduction

If you did a good job preparing and doing the observation this should be an easy step, either way, keep in mind the following steps.

  • Remove all focus sequence.

  • Remove all target acquisition or test frames.

  • Using your observation’s log remove all unwanted files.

  • Make sure all data has the same gain (GAIN) and readout noise (RDNOISE)

  • Make sure all data has the same Region Of Interest or ROI (ROI).

The pipeline does not modify the original files unless there are problems with fits compliance, is never a bad idea to keep copies of your original data in a safe place.

Updating Keywords

Since version 1.3.0 if your data is older than August 6, 2019, you will need to change the following keywords.

  • SLIT: Replace whitespaces with underscore, remove ” and all letters are uppercase. For instance 0.45" long slit becomes 0.45_LONG_SLIT.

  • GRATING: Grating’s lines/mm goes first and then the manufacturer. For instance. SYZY_400 becomes 400_SYZY.

  • WAVMODE: Replace whitespace with underscore and all letters are capitalized. For instance. 400 m1 becomes 400_M1.

Note

General rules are: Underscore is the only accepted separator. All letter must be upper case. Remove any character that need escaping.

Processing your 2D images

It is the first step in the reduction process, the main tasks are listed below.

  • Create master bias

  • Create master flats

  • Apply Corrections:

    • Overscan

    • Trim image

    • Detect slit and trim out non-illuminated areas

    • Bias correction

    • Normalized flat field correction

    • Cosmic ray rejection

Note

Some older Goodman HTS data has headers that are not FITS compliant, In such cases the headers are fixed and that is the only modification done to raw data.

The 2D images are initially reduced using redccd. You can simply move to the directory where your raw data is located and do:

redccd

Though you can modify the behavior in several ways.

Running redccd will create a directory called RED where it will put your reduced data. If you want to run it again it will prevent you from accidentally removing your already reduced data unless you use --auto-clean this will tell the pipeline to delete the RED directory and start over.

redccd --auto-clean

A summary of the most important command line arguments are presented below.

  • --cosmic <method> Let you select the method to do Cosmic Ray Removal.

  • --debug Show extended messages and plots of intermediate steps.

  • --flat-normalize <method> Let you select the method to do Flat Normalization.

  • --flat-norm-order <order> Set order for the model used to do Flat Normalization. Default 15.

  • --ignore-bias Ignores the existence or lack of BIAS data.

  • --ignore-flats Ignores the existence or lack of FLAT data.

  • --raw-path <path> Set the directory where the raw data is located, can be relative.

  • --red-path <path> Set the directory where the reduced data will be stored. Default RED.

  • --saturation <saturation> Set the saturation threshold in percentage. There is a table with all the readout modes and their values at which saturation is reached, then all the pixels exceeding that value are counted. If the percentage is larger that the threshold defined with this argument the flat is marked as saturated. The default value is 1 percent.

This is intended to work with spectroscopic and imaging data, that it is why the process is split in two.

Extracting the spectra

After you are done Processing your 2D images it is time to extract the spectrum into a wavelength-calibrated 1D file.

The script is called redspec. The tasks performed are the following:

  • Classifies data and creates the match of OBJECT and COMP if it exists.

  • Identifies targets

  • Extracts targets

  • Saves extracted targets to 1D spectrum

  • Finds wavelength solution automatically

  • Linearizes data

  • Saves wavelength calibrated file

First you have to move into the RED directory, this is a precautionary method to avoid unintended deletion of your raw data. Then you can simply do:

redspec

And the pipeline should work its magic, though this might not be the desired behavior for every user or science case, we have implemented a set of command line arguments which are listed below.

  • --data-path <path> Folder were data to be processed is located. Default is current working directory.

  • --proc-path <path> Folder were processed data will be stored. Default is current working directory.

  • --search-pattern <pattern> Prefix for picking up files. Default cfzsto. See File Prefixes.

  • --extraction <method> Select the Extraction Methods. The only one implemented at the moment is fractional .

  • --reference-files <path> Folder where to find the reference lamps.

  • --debug Shows extended and more messages.

  • --debug-plot Shows plots of intermediate steps.

  • --max-targets <value> Maximum number of targets to detect in a single image. Default is 3.

  • --save-plots Save plots.

  • --plot-results Show plots during execution.

The mathematical model used to define the wavelength solution is recorded in the header even though the data has been linearized for record purpose.

Description of custom keywords

The pipeline adds several keywords to keep track of the process and in general for keeping important information available. The following table gives a description of all the keywords added by The Goodman Pipeline, though not all of them are added to all the images.

General Purpose Keywords

These keywords are used for record purpose, except for GSP_FNAM which is used to keep track of the file name.

General purpose keywords, added to all images at the moment of the first read.

Keyword

Purpose

GSP_VERS

Pipeline version.

GSP_ONAM

Original file name, first read.

GSP_PNAM

Parent file name.

GSP_FNAM

Current file name.

GSP_PATH

Path from where the file was read.

GSP_TECH

Observing technique. Imaging or Spectroscopy.

GSP_DATE

Date of processing.

GSP_OVER

Overscan region.

GSP_TRIM

Trim section.

GSP_SLIT

Slit trim section. From slit-illuminated area.

GSP_BIAS

Master bias file used.

GSP_FLAT

Master flat file used.

GSP_SCTR

Science target file name (for lamps only)

GSP_LAMP

Reference lamp used to obtain wavelength solution

GSP_NORM

Master flat normalization method.

GSP_COSM

Cosmic ray rejection method.

GSP_TERR

RMS error of target trace

GSP_EXTR

Extraction window at first column

GSP_BKG1

First background extraction zone

GSP_BKG2

Second background extraction zone

GSP_WRMS

Wavelength solution RMS Error.

GSP_WPOI

Number of points used to calculate RMS Error.

GSP_WREJ

Number of points rejected from RMS Error Calculation.

GSP_DCRR

Reference paper for DCR software (cosmic ray rejection).

Target Trace Model

Keywords used to describe the model used to fit the target’s trace.

Keyword

Purpose

GSP_TMOD

Name of mathematical model from astropy’s modeling

GSP_TORD

Order of the model used.

GSP_TC00

Value of parameter c0.

GSP_TC01

Value of parameter c1.

GSP_TC02

Value of parameter c2. This goes on depending the order.

Non-linear wavelength solution

Since writing non-linear wavelength solutions to the headers using the FITS standard (reference) is extremely complex and not necessarily well documented, we came up with the solution of simply describing the mathematical model from astropy’s modeling. This allows for maintaining the data untouched while keeping a reliable description of the wavelength solution.

The current implementation will work for writting any polinomial model. Reading is implemented only for Chebyshev1D which is the model by default.

Keywords used to describe a non-linear wavelength solution.

Keyword

Purpose

GSP_FUNC

Name of mathematical model from astropy’s modeling

GSP_ORDR

Order of the model used.

GSP_NPIX

Number of pixels.

GSP_C000

Value of parameter c0.

GSP_C001

Value of parameter c1.

GSP_C002

Value of parameter c2. This goes on depending the order.

Combined Images

Every image used in a combination of images is recorded in the header of the resulting one. The order does not have importance but most likely the header of the first one will be used.

The combination is made using the combine() method with the following parameters

  • method='median'

  • sigma_clip=True

  • sigma_clip_low_thresh=1.0

  • sigma_clip_high_thresh=1.0

At this moment these parameters are not user-configurable.

Keywords that list all the images used to produce a combined image.

Keyword

Purpose

GSP_IC01

First image used to create combined.

GSP_IC02

Second image used to create combined.

Detected lines

The reference lamp library maintains the lamps non-linearized and also they get a record of the pixel value and its equivalent in angstrom. In the following table a three-line lamp is shown.

Description of all the keywords used to list lines in lamps in Pixel and Angstrom.

Keyword

Purpose

GSP_P001

Pixel value for the first line detected.

GSP_P002

Pixel value for the second line detected.

GSP_P003

Pixel value for the third line detected.

GSP_A001

Angstrom value for the first line detected.

GSP_A002

Angstrom value for the second line detected.

GSP_A003

Angstrom value for the third line detected.

Cosmic Ray Removal

Warning

The parameters for either cosmic ray removal method are not fully understood neither tuned but they work for most common instrument configurations. If your extracted spectrum shows weird features, specially if you use a custom mode, the most likely culprit are the parameters of the method you chose. Please let us know.

The argument --cosmic <method> has four options but there are only two real methods.

default (default):

Different methods work different for different binning. So if <method> is set to default the pipeline will decide as follows:

dcr for binning 1x1

lacosmic for binning 2x2 and 3x3 though binning 3x3 has not being tested.

dcr:

It was already said that this method work better for binning 1x1. More information can be found on Installing DCR. The disadvantages of this method is that is a program written in C and it is required to write the file to the disk, process it and read it back again. Still is faster than lacosmic.

The parameters for running dcr are written in a file called dcr.par a lookup table and a file generator have been implemented but you can parse custom parameters by placing a dcr.par file in a different directory and point it using --dcr-par-file <path>.

lacosmic:

This is the preferred method for files with binning 2x2 and 3x3. This is the Astroscrappy’s implementation and is run with the default parameters. Future versions might include some parameter adjustment.

none:

Skips the cosmic ray removal process.

Asymetric binnings have not been tested but the pipeline only takes in consideration the dispersion axis to decide. This does not mean that the spatial binning does not impact the performance of any of the methods, we just don’t know it yet.

Flat Normalization

There are three possible <method> (s) to do the normalization of master flats. For the method using a model the default model’s order is 15. It can be set using --flat-norm-order <order>.

mean:

Calculates the mean of the image using numpy’s mean() and divide the image by it.

simple (default):

Collapses the master flat across the spatial direction, fits a Chebyshev1D model of order 15 and divide the full image by this fitted model.

full:

Fits a Chebyshev1D model to every line/column (dispersion axis) and divides it by the fitted model. This method takes too much to process and it has been left in the code for experimentation purposes only.

Extraction Methods

The argument --extraction <method> has two options but only fractional is implemented.

fractional:

Fractional pixel extraction differs from a simple and rough extraction in how it deals with the edges of the region. goodman_pipeline.core.core.extract_fractional_pixel()

optimal:

Unfortunately this method has not been implemented yet.

File Prefixes

There are several ways one can do this but we selected adding prefixes to the file name because is easier to add and also easy to filter using a terminal, for instance.

ls cfzsto*fits

or in python

import glob

file_list = glob.glob('cfzsto*fits')

So what does all those letter mean? Here is a table to explain it.

Characters and meaning of prefixes

Letter

Meaning

o

Overscan Correction Applied

t

Trim Correction Applied

s

Slit trim correction applied

z

Bias correction applied

f

Flat correction applied

c

Cosmic rays removed

e

Spectrum extracted to 1D

w

1D Spectrum wavelength calibrated

So, for an original file named file.fits:

o_file.fits

Means the file have been overscan corrected while

eczsto_file.fits

Means the spectrum has been extracted to a 1D file but the file has not been flat fielded (f missing).

Ideally after running redccd the file should be named:

cfzsto_file.fits

And after running redspec:

wecfzsto_file.fits