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PS1 has taken X images from 2010 to 2015. These images are detrended, astrometrically calibrated, warped, stacked, and differenced. The different types of images are described below

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Planned content:

  • Warped Single Epoch Images
  • Stacked Images (Armin)
  • Difference Images (Armin)
  • Image Headers
  • Image Anomalies - glints, bad pixels, background errors
  • Mask Image (Armin)
    • -> Data Quality Flags
  • Weight Image

Raw Images

After an exposure is taken at the summit, the raw image files of the 60 OTA CCDs are corrected for persistence issues and then handed over to the IPP processing for further analysis. The PS1 public archive does not provide these images.

Camera Images

The camera images are created by detrending the raw images (e.g., masking, bias subtraction, flat fielding), and applying an astrometric and photometric calibration. The PS1 public archive does not provide these images.

Image Artifacts and Anomalies

The OTA CCDs have known artifacts and anomalies. A lot of work has gone into characterizing these artifacts, and removing them if possible. Pixels affected by these artifacts or anomalies are kept tracked of in the mask images with pixel flags.

Warps

Warps are the result of resampling and realigning the camera images onto regular areas (called skycells) on the sky (basically aligned N-S, E-W). How this is done depends on the particular tessellation. Different surveys may have different tessellations. A warp will generally consist of several different OTAs, therefore there are gaps between the OTAs, as well as the smaller gaps between the cells. Warps are astrometrically and photometrically calibrated. These images can be accessed and downloaded through the PS1 archive.

Stacks

Stacks are the 'optimal' combination of multiple warps on the same skycell. Consequently, the stacks are on the same sky tessellation than the warps. For the 3pi this may only be 10 or so warps, but for the Medium Deeps it can be several hundred. Stacks are also astrometrically and photometrically calibrated. These images can be accessed and downloaded through the PS1 archive. As well as the standard masks and weights, stacks come with two other auxiliary image files:

  • 'num' images - these contain the number of warps with valid data which contributed to each pixel
  • 'exp' images - these contain the exposure time in seconds which contributed to each pixel

Difference Images

Difference images are created by subtracting a warp from another image, in general the stack, after matching the PSFs and normalization using a spatially varying kernel. All static objects like galaxies and constant stars are subtracted out, and only the excess flux from the different epochs is left. Even though the differences images are not stored on disk, they can be created, and it is planned to make them accessible through the PS1 at a later release.

Mask Images

All images, warps and stacks, have Pixel Flags set for each individual pixels. This information is saved in a mask image, which in general has the suffix mask.fits(.fz) and mk.fits(.fz) for warp and stack images, respectively.

Weight Images

Weight images are variance maps. For single epoch warps, these variance contains the readnoise, Poisson noise, IfA: FILL with other contributions. For stacks, the noise is propagated from the individual input warps. These weight images can be used for estimates of the uncertainties in the photometry. We note that the deprojection of the chip images into the warps correlates the pixels, introducing covariance. Therefore the derived uncertainties might underestimate the true noise.

 

 

Image:NGC_894

3pi Survey
Chip Images
Warp Images 
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