fiinfo - providing information or image stamps for images
fiinfo [options] [-i <input>]
<outputs>
The main purpose of the `fiinfo` program is to give some
information about the FITS files (primarily FITS images, but output dump is
supported for tables and binary tables also).
- -h, --help
- Gives general summary about the command line options.
- --long-help,
--help-long
- Gives a detailed list of command line options.
- --wiki-help,
--help-wiki, --mediawiki-help,
--help-mediawiki
- Gives a detailed list of command line options in Mediawiki format.
- --version,
--version-short, --short-version
- Gives some version information about the program.
- -i, --input <image
file>
- Name of the input FITS image file.
- --summary,
--long-summary
- Give a summary about the content structure of the FITS file. Namely, the
main characteristics and dimensions of the primary image, followed by the
list of optional extensions and their main properties.
- -s, --statistics
<list of statistics>
- Calculate basic statistics for the image. See "Statistics
options" below for available statistics methods. The statistics
itself contains four numbers: the total number of pixels involved in the
calculations, the final number of pixels used for the statistics (which
might be smaller than the previous one if the outliers are rejected), an
average value and a scatter.
- -d, --data <list of
derived image data>
- Calculate some other more quantities related to astronomical images. This
option should be followed by a comma-separated list of quantities. See
"Image characteristics" below for more details about these.
- -b, --box <number
of blocks>
- This option specifies the number of blocks, which is used to divide the
input image. Some quantities (see "Image characteristics") can
be derived on a per block basis either.
- -a, --order
<order>
- Order of polynomial spatial variations in some derived image
characterization quantities (see also "Image
characteristics").
- -n, --newline
- In the output, each quantity should be written in separate lines. By
default, the output is a single line, containing the desired quantities or
statistics.
- --ignore-mask
- Completely ignore the mask associated to the input image.
- --output-dump
<file>
- Name of an output file in which a raw image dump is written. Each line of
this file contains 3 or 4 columns: X, Y coordinates and flux, optionally
followed by the associated mask flag (see also
"-m|--dump-mask").
- -m,
--dump-mask
- The raw image dump specified by "--output-dump" should contain
the masking information beyond the coordinates and intensities.
- --output-pnm,
--output-ppm, --output-pgm
- Name of an output file in which the image is stored in a variant of PNM
format. These images are intended to be a kind of "human
visible" images, appropriately scaled for normal displays. These
images are stored in PNM format, which is an easily parseable (thus raw,
uncompressed) format, supported by many graphic programs (and by the
NETPBM package). Such an image conversation always results data loss. See
also options "--pgm" or "--ppm" for further
details.
- --pgm <PGM specific
conversion options>
- This command line argument is followed by a comma-separated list of
options, which specifies the scaling and other properties of the output
image. The resulted image will be a grey-scale (PGM) image, even if a
color palette is requested. See "PNM specifications" below.
- --ppm <PPM specific
conversion options>
- This command line argument is followed by a comma-separated list of
options, which specifies the scaling and other properties of the output
image. The resulted image will be a true-color (PPM) image, even if a
greyscale colormap is requested. See also "PNM specifications"
below for more details.
- mean
- The mean value of the pixel intensities.
- median
- The median value of the pixel intensities.
- iterations
- Reject the outlier pixels before doing any statistics.
- lower=<sigma>,
upper=<sigma>, sigma=<sigma>
- Lower, upper or common rejection level, in the units of standard deviation
(which is derived around the mean or median value, depending on the
request of the user).
- min, max
- Minimal and maximal pixel intensities on the image.
- mean
- Mean intensity level.
- stddev
- Standard deviation.
- sky
- Sky background level.
- skysigma
- Sky background scatter.
- linear
- Use a linear intensity scaling.
- log
- Use a logarithmic intensity scaling.
- squared
- Use a squared intensity scaling.
- sqrt
- Use a square root intensity scaling.
- histequ
- Use a histogram equalized intensity scaling.
- minmax
- Use the minimal and maximal pixel intensities for scaling boundaries.
- percentage=<%>
- Use the minimal and maximal values of the innermost specified percent of
the pixel intensities.
- min=<min>,
max=<max>
- Use the specified minimal and maximal values for scaling boundaries.
- zscale
- Use the "zscale" algorithm to determine scaling boundaries.
- zmax, zmin
- Use the "zmax" or "zmin" algorithm to determine
scaling boundaries.
- zcontrast=<zcontrast>
- Use the specified contrast value to determine the scaling boundaries in
the case of "zscale", "zmax" or "zmin"
methods. The default value is 0.25.
- reverse
- Use an inverted color map.
- contrast=<C>,
brightness=<B>
- Use the specified values for adjusting the final contrast and brightness.
The default values are 1 and 0.5, respectively, according to the standard
image contrast and brightness level definitions.
- 8, 8bit
- Create an 8-bit PGM or PPM output. This is the default.
- 16, 16bit
- Create a 16-bit PGM or PPM output instead of the default 8-bit.
- palette=<color1>:<color2>:<color3>:...
- Specify an alternate color map. Each color should be a hexadecimal
representation of a given color, i.e. it should be in one of the forms of
G, GG, GGGG, RGB, RRGGBB or RRRRGGGGBBBB, denoting 4 bit grey, 8 bit grey,
16 bit grey, 3x4 bit truecolor, 3x8 bit truecolor or 3x16 bit truecolor
representation, respectively. The color map gradient will be continuous if
the colors are separated by colons. Jumps in the gradient can be defined
by separating the successive colors by a slash, "/" instead of
colons.
Note that the syntax followed by the "--pgm" or
"--ppm" command line arguments is exactly the same for both
options. However, color images will be converted to greyscale if
"--pgm" is specified, and vice versa, "--ppm" always
yields a PPM format, even if the color gradient is merely a grayscale one.
The default palette is 0:F for both PGM and PPM formats, i.e. a pure black -
white gradient.
Report bugs to <apal@szofi.net>, see also
http://fitsh.net/.
Copyright © 1996, 2002, 2004-2008, 2010-2015; Pal, Andras
<apal@szofi.net>