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Astronomical Data Analysis Software and Systems IV
ASP Conference Series, Vol. 77, 1995
R. A. Shaw, H. E. Payne, and J. J. E. Hayes, eds.
Automated Globular Cluster Photometry with DASHA
O. M. Smirnov and A. P. Ipatov
Institute of Astronomy of the Russian Academy of Sciences / Isaac
Newton Institute, Moscow Branch, 48 Pyatnitskaya Str., Moscow
109017 Russia
Abstract. We describe a tool in the pcIPS environment for finishing
the job of globular cluster photometry started by DAOPHOT II: starting
with the instrumental magnitudes derived by DAOPHOT II, DASHA can
automatically produce final color­magnitude diagrams.
1. Introduction
Photometric observations of globular clusters usually involve enormous amounts
of data. A typical data set can consist of several dozen CCD frames produced
with two or more different filters and at different exposures, with anything from
a few hundred to a few thousand stars present in each frame. Powerful software
tools are required if the reductions are to be accomplished at the cost of CPU
hours rather than man­hours. The process of data reduction involves two phases:
1. Photometry of individual CCD frames, giving as results several dozen per­
frame lists of instrumental magnitude measurements.
2. Calibrating magnitudes, cross­identifying objects between frames and col­
lecting their measurements. The results are magnitudes (averaged across
all the frames) in every available filter.
The first phase can be performed using one of several PSF­fitting stellar pho­
tometry packages currently available to the community (PSF fitting is required
since the frames are usually too crowded for simple aperture photometry). Of
these perhaps, DAOPHOT II (Stetson 1991) is by far the most comprehensive,
allowing near­automatic reductions of large batches of data. We are unaware
of any packages that provide a complete reduction path for the second phase,
which is why we developed DASHA. DASHA can automate the whole process
of globular cluster photometry, from instrumental magnitude lists produced by
DAOPHOT II, to final color­magnitude diagrams. For example, having reduced
45 CCD frames (3 filters/15 frames each) with DAOPHOT II, you can cross­
identify all the stars, calibrate them, produce a table of mean magnitudes in
each filter, and obtain color­magnitude diagrams, all within one or two hours.
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2. Design Goals
Several design goals were involved in the development of DASHA:
2.1. Ease of Use
DASHA is implemented in the pcIPS environment (Smirnov & Piskunov 1994),
and takes full advantage of its graphical user interface (GUI). In addition,
DASHA constantly displays various plots that allow a user to keep track of
exactly what's happening to the data.
2.2. Data Format Compatibility with DAOPHOT II
DAOPHOT II was selected as a base for DASHA, for two reasons: First, a
full version of DAOPHOT II, PCDAOPHOT II, has been implemented under
pcIPS. Therefore, both phases of the reduction process can be performed in
one environment; and second, DAOPHOT II handles crowded fields very well.
Globular cluster observations are usually very crowded.
2.3. Flexibility
Functionally, DASHA consists of several modules. Using them in different com­
binations allows the user to accommodate variations in the reduction process.
3. Components of DASHA
DASHA is oriented towards star lists produced by DAOPHOT II as source
data. Each star list is an ASCII table with one line per star. The final output
lists contain columns for coordinates, instrumental magnitude, magnitude error,
goodness­of­fit statistics, etc. The same format (with some extensions) is used
throughout DASHA for intermediate and final results.
DASHA contains several modules:
StarVis is a tool for visualizing star lists. It can produce plots and histograms
of any columns in the star list, and allows the user to filter a list by select­
ing regions on the plot using the mouse. StarVis is used throughout the
reduction process to accomplish different tasks. For example, the source
star lists produced by DAOPHOT II can be filtered using magnitude vs..
magnitude error and magnitude vs. goodness­of­fit plots to discard bad
measurements. StarVis is also useful for reviewing intermediate results, as
well as producing final color­magnitude diagrams.
Calibrate produces a simulated star field by plotting the stars of a list on an
image, and allows the user to select calibration standards and specify their
photometric magnitudes.
Cross­identify and merge observations (XID) merges star lists for differ­
ent frames of one filter. XID can automatically cross­identify the stars
across all the frames, compute weighted averages for the magnitudes, and
write the results into a single merged list. In the event that some lists can
not be calibrated (i.e., they originate from long­exposure frames where

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only faint stars are measured by DAOPHOT II, the brighter stars be­
ing saturated, and thus do not contain any photometric standards), XID
can also automatically select secondary calibration standards from other,
already calibrated, lists, and perform cross­calibration.
Cross­identify and compile filter table (XFilt) compiles the merged lists
for all available filters into a single filter table, containing mean magnitudes
for each star as measured and calibrated in each filter. In order to do this,
XFilt automatically cross­identifies stars between merged lists.
Create color table (ColTab) converts a filter table into color tables. The user
can specify which columns to place into the color table (i.e., if the filter
table contains measurements in B, V , R, and I , ColTab can make tables of
BV RI , B \Gamma V , V \Gamma R, etc.) A color table can be considered the final output
of DASHA, since it contains magnitudes and color indices for every star
observed. Using StarVis, the user can produce a color­magnitude diagram
based on the color table.
4. Automatic Cross­Identification of Objects
A feature of DASHA (or more specifically, the XID and XFilt modules) that is
crucial to its productivity is the ability to automatically cross­identify objects
between frames. Frames are not always aligned in position, so to perform a
cross­identification, DASHA must first find the positional offset between them.
DASHA finds the offset by automatically selecting a set of positional standards,
i.e., objects that seem to be present in both frames. Once it has the standards, it
can compute the mean offset; and once it has the mean offset, the rest is trivial.
Clearly, the actual selection of standards is not so trivial. DASHA ap­
proaches the problem much like a human would: it compares the two frames
to see which patterns of stars seem similar. More specifically, it starts out by
selecting at random a bunch of two­star patterns on one frame, and tries to
find similar patterns on the second frame (each pair of corresponding patterns
is called a cluster.) Next, it attempts to grow each cluster by adding a star
at random to the pattern on the first frame. If the second frame also has a
star at the expected position, both stars are added to the respective patterns.
When DASHA repeats this step over and over, clusters with correctly cross­
identified patterns tend to grow, while misidentified ones don't. DASHA drops
those clusters that do not grow for a specific time
Once the clusters contain enough stars, DASHA performs a few more idle
loops to let any remaining misidentifications perish, and then takes the remaining
stars as positional standards. Typically, it finds over a hundred standards in
several seconds.
5. First Practical Results
Using DASHA, we obtained BVI photometry of the globular cluster NGC 5927.
Unique observational data was kindly provided by Dr. G. Alcaino (Isaac Newton
Institute, Chile), and consisted of 17 CCD frames in the B filter, 17 in I , and 13

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Figure 1. (a) Color­magnitude diagram, (b) B magnitude distribu­
tion for NGC 5927.
in V (telescope: ESO's 2.2 m at La Silla). The most interesting diagram, B vs.
B \Gamma I , is included here (Figure 1a); Figure 1b is a histogram of the distribution
of B magnitudes. The final color table contains over 5000 stars, of which over
2000 are measured in all three filters. The whole process, starting with AllStar's
results, and ending with color­magnitude diagrams, took little over an hour.
BV RI photometry of three other globular clusters, NGC362, NGC5286,
and NGC7099, is in progress at the time of writing.
6. Feedback and Further Information
We welcome any questions and comments about DASHA. Please contact Oleg
Smirnov by e­mail at oms@inasan.rssi.ru. DASHA and the pcIPS image pro­
cessing system are commercial products. Please contact Oleg Smirnov for details.
Acknowledgments. We would like to thank ST ScI for the financial sup­
port that made this presentation possible.
References
Smirnov, O. M., & Piskunov, N. E. 1994, in Astronomical Data Analysis Soft­
ware and Systems III, ASP Conf. Ser., Vol. 61, eds. D. R. Crabtree, R. J.
Hanisch, & J. Barnes (San Francisco, ASP), p. 245smirnov2
Stetson, P. B. 1992, in Astronomical Data Analysis Software and Systems I, ASP
Conf. Ser., Vol. 25, eds. D. M. Worrall, C. Biemesderfer, & J. Barnes
(San Francisco, ASP), p. 297