Overview
The Pandeia Engine is a Python module (compatible with Python 3.6 and later) that functions as the computational engine of the Roman ETC. It can be imported and run as a standalone module.
API Compatibility
The Pandeia Engine API may change at any time. The following information and examples are for Pandeia Engine 1.7.x only, and are not guaranteed to be accurate or functional for previous or future releases. Updates (and information about planned pending API changes) can be found on the Roman - Pandeia Engine News page.
The engine itself can be run with the command
from pandeia.engine import perform_calculation result = perform_calculation.perform_calculation(calculation)
where "calculation" is a hierarchical input dictionary describing a scene of sources, an instrument setup, and an extraction strategy, and "result" is a hierarchical output dictionary.
Such input dictionaries can be created with function build_default_calc(), which creates a default dictionary, and then edited:
from pandeia.engine import calc_utils calculation = calc_utils.build_default_calc("roman","wfi","imaging")
The command above produces the WFI Imaging calculation below.
API Default
In the event that there is a typo in the mode name ("imaging", above), the function will substitute the default mode for that instrument.
Full API
The full API documentation, with all possible options and combinations for any instrument, can be found in this file.
Example
The following dictionary defines a Roman WFI Imaging observation with the F062 filter, imaging subarray (for a 3.04s read time), medium8 readout pattern, and 6 groups; for a 0.001 mJy flat-spectrum point source (in fnu) intended to be observed with a 0.2" aperture.
(click here to download as a JSON file: imaging_f062_medium8_imaging.jeng)