MPROJECTPP(1) | Montage | MPROJECTPP(1) |
mProjectPP - Re-project FITS images
mProjectPP [-z factor] [-d level] [-b border] [-s statusfile] [-o altout.hdr] [-i altin.hdr] [-h hdu] [-x scale] [-w weightfile] [-W fixed-weight] [-t threshold] [-X] [-b border-string] in.fits out.fits template.hdr
mProjectPP reprojects a single image to the scale defined in an alternate FITS header template generated (usually) by mTANhdr. The program produces a pair of images: the reprojected image and an "area" image consisting of the fraction input pixel sky area that went into each output pixel. This area image goes through all the subsequent processing that the reprojected image does, allowing it to be properly coadded at the end.
mProjectPP performs a plane-to-plane transform on the input image, and is an adaptation of the Mopex algorithm and developed in collaboration with the Spitzer Space Telescope. It provides a speed increase of approximately a factor of 30 over the general-purpose mProject. However, mProjectPP is only suitable for projections which can be approximated by tangent-plane projections (TAN, SIN, ZEA, STG, ARC), and is therefore not suited for images covering large portions of the sky. Also note that it does not directly support changes in coordinate system (i.e. equatorial to galactic coordinates), though these changes can be facilitated by the use of an alternate header.
One situation that has happened often enough to warrant special note: It is possible to define a FITS header with the reference location off the image. In particular, people often reference cylindrical projections (e.g., CAR, CEA) to location (0.,0.) (e.g., the Galactic center). This is not wrong in itself but does lead to extremely large pixel offsets (e.g., in the hundreds of thousands). Related to this, if you extract a header from an image with large offsets of this type, it is unlikely that you can simply change projection types without also adjusting the reference location/offsets. Most likely, you will end up with the reproject data all being off-scale.
Two files are created as output: the reprojected FITS file (out.fits), and an "area" image (out_area.fits). See the image reprojection algorithm for more information.
The drizzle algorithm has been implemented but has not been tested in this release.
If a header template contains carriage returns (i.e., created/modified on a Windows machine), the cfitsio library will be unable to read it properly, resulting in the error: [struct stat="ERROR", status=207, msg="illegal character in keyword"]
It is best for the background correction algorithms if the area described in the header template completely encloses all of the input images in their entirety. If parts of input images are "chopped off" by the header template, the background correction will be affected. We recommend you use an expanded header for the reprojection and background modeling steps, returning to the originally desired header size for the final coaddition. The default background matching assumes that there are no non-linear background variations in the individual images (and therefore in the overlap differences). If there is any uncertainty in this regard, it is safer to turn on the "level only" background matching (the "-l" flag in mBgModel.
mProjectPP is only suitable for use on projections which can be approximated by tangent-plane projections (TAN, SIN, ZEA, STG, ARC), and is therefore not suited for images covering large portions of the sky. Also note that it does not directly support changes in coordinate system (i.e. equatorial to galactic coordinates), though these changes can be facilitated by the use of an alternate header.
2001-2015 California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California
If your research uses Montage, please include the following acknowledgement: "This research made use of Montage. It is funded by the National Science Foundation under Grant Number ACI-1440620, and was previously funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Earth Science Technology Office, Computation Technologies Project, under Cooperative Agreement Number NCC5-626 between NASA and the California Institute of Technology."
The Montage distribution includes an adaptation of the MOPEX algorithm developed at the Spitzer Science Center.
Dec 2016 | Montage 5 |