Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес оригинального документа : http://www.stsci.edu/instruments/wfpc2/Wfpc2_dhb/appendixB4.html
Дата изменения: Wed Feb 20 18:27:15 2002
Дата индексирования: Sat Dec 22 17:03:46 2007
Кодировка:

Поисковые слова: р п р п
B.3 Associations
STScI

HST Data Handbook for WFPC2

TOC PREV NEXT INDEX PDF

B.3 Associations


The STIS and NICMOS calibration pipelines sometimes produce single calibrated images from associations of many exposures. These associations allow HST pipeline processing to proceed further than it has in the past. For example, a NICMOS observer might specify a dithering pattern in a Phase II proposal. NICMOS would then take several exposures at offset positions, and the pipeline would combine them into a single mosaic. In this case, the original set of exposures constitutes the association, and the mosaic is the association product. Similarly, a STIS observer might specify a CR-SPLIT sequence in a Phase II proposal. STIS would gather several exposures at the same pointing, and the STIS pipeline would process this association of exposures into single image, free of cosmic rays, that would be the association product.

When you search the Archive with StarView for observations involving associations of exposures, your search will identify the final association product. The rootnames of association products always end in zero (see figure B.1 above.) If you request both Calibrated and Uncalibrated data from the Archive, you will receive both the association product and the exposures that went into making it. The corresponding association table, located in the file with suffix asn and the same rootname as the association product, lists the exposures belonging to the association. You can read this file using the STSDAS tprint or tread tasks (see table 3.1 in the HST Introduction). The exposure IDs in the association table share the same ipppss sequence as the association rootname, followed by a base 36 number nn (n = 0-9,A-Z) that uniquely identifies each exposure, and a character t that denotes the data transmission mode (see figure B.1).

In practice, STIS and NICMOS store the exposures belonging to associations differently. The exposures belonging to a STIS association all reside in the same file, while the exposures belonging to a NICMOS association reside in separate datasets. See the relevant Data Structures chapters for more details.

Information on the exposures belonging to an association is also available through StarView (see chapter 1 of the HST Introduction). From the <Welcome> Screen, click on [HST Instrument Searches] to get the <HST Instruments> screen, and then click on the [Associations] button for the instrument of interest. You can then search for the various exposures belonging to an association by entering the rootname of the association in the Association ID field and clicking on [Begin Search] . An Association Results Screen will display the results of the search, which you can step though using the [Step Forward] button. figure B.1 below gives an example of a NICMOS Association Results Screen. Note the differences between the association rootname and coordinates and those of the individual exposure.

Figure B.1: Association Results Screen from StarView
 


Space Telescope Science Institute
http://www.stsci.edu
Voice: (410) 338-1082
help@stsci.edu
TOC PREV NEXT INDEX PDF