cutout-fits¶
A utility to produce cutouts of FITS images using astropy. Remotely-hosted
FITS images are fully supported using ffspec and s3fs.
Installation¶
From PyPI (stable):
pip install cutout-fits
From git (latest):
pip install git+https://github.com/AlecThomson/cutout-fits.git
Usage¶
Universal cutouts¶
The command-line tool can be invoked using cutout-fits entry point. Currently,
spatial cutouts are specified using a centre right ascension and declination
along with a cutout radius. Spectral cutouts are specified with a start and end
frequency range.
Any additional cube dimensions, such as time or Stokes, will simply be included in the cutout. Further, any non-image HDUs present in the FITS file will also be simply included in the output file.
$ cutout-fits -h
usage: cutout-fits [-h] [-o] [-v] [--freq-start FREQ_START] [--freq-end FREQ_END] infile outfile ra_deg dec_deg radius_arcmin
Make a cutout of a FITS file
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
File options:
infile Path to input FITS file - can be a remote URL
outfile Path to output FITS file
-o, --overwrite Overwrite output file if it exists
-v, --verbosity Increase output verbosity
Cutout options:
ra_deg Centre RA in degrees
dec_deg Centre Dec in degrees
radius_arcmin Cutout radius in arcminutes
--freq-start FREQ_START
Start frequency in Hz
--freq-end FREQ_END End frequency in Hz
CASDA Access¶
Cutouts from the CSIRO ASKAP Science Data Archive
(CASDA) can be made by invoking the
cutout-casda entry point. The same set of cutout arguments as cutout-fits
are supported
$ cutout-casda -h
usage: cutout-casda [-h] [--freq-start FREQ_START] [--freq-end FREQ_END] [--username USERNAME] [--store-password] [--reenter-password] [-v]
ra_deg dec_deg radius_arcmin filename [filename ...]
Make a cutout of a FITS file on CASDA
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
Cutout options:
ra_deg Centre RA in degrees
dec_deg Centre Dec in degrees
radius_arcmin Cutout radius in arcminutes
--freq-start FREQ_START
Start frequency in Hz
--freq-end FREQ_END End frequency in Hz
CASDA options:
filename FITS file name(s)
--username USERNAME CASDA username
--store-password Store password in keyring
--reenter-password Re-enter password
-v, --verbosity Increase output verbosity
The
CASDA Astroquery API
requires an OPAL username and password to login.
You can supply your username via the CLI or as the CASDA_USERNAME environment
variable. Astroquery supports caching your password, which you will need if
running non-interactively. To cache your password you can interactively run the
helper script casda-login:
$ casda-login -h
usage: casda-login [-h] username
Login to CASDA and save credentials
positional arguments:
username Username for CASDA
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
Python API¶
Further API documentation is provided on read the docs.
Remote files¶
If accessing a remote file on S3, you’ll need to set your access keys. To do
this, fsspec looks for the following environment variables:
FSSPEC_S3_ENDPOINT_URL='https://...'
FSSPEC_S3_KEY='...'
FSSPEC_S3_SECRET='...'
This project support using a .env file to store these variables, if needed.
Simply set these variables in a .env files in your current working directory
or set them in your environment if you wish. Be careful not to commit them to
VCS.