photometry on images saved as -ieee float.

Affiliation
British Astronomical Association, Variable Star Section (BAA-VSS)
Thu, 09/06/2018 - 22:11

I use MaxIm DL to generally capture and perform photometry on them after standard calibrations.

I use a QSI532 camera which operates at 16bit

I found that when I saved images as 16bit I would often get a central dark spot on the brighter stars, particularly when I used other software to view the images.  I found that finally saving them as ieee float with MaxIm solved this problem.

Question is it ok to carry out photometry on images saved this way? I seem to recal I got slight differences when I compared results.

Regards,

Eric

Affiliation
American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO)
floating point

Hi Eric,

Saving in floating point is fine, and the photometry should be good.  It may differ slightly from photometry done on a 16-bit image, depending on whether it is a raw image straight from the camera, or whether you have calibrated it with darks and flats.

In the other method, saving in unsigned 16-bit format, some systems don't handle the FITS standard very well, especially for display/viewing purposes.  I've never had any problems with VPHOT or MaximDL in this regard, so I can't say anything regarding central dark spots.  That sounds like a truncation issue (obviously avoided with floating point).

Arne

Affiliation
British Astronomical Association, Variable Star Section (BAA-VSS)
floating point

Hi Arne,

thank you for your reply which eleveats my worries.

The images are fully calibrated and I find viewing them with MaxIm fine. It's when I use  Astrometrica and possibly AstroImageJ, I can't remember exactly which other software.

Knowing now that the photometry will be ok was the main issue.  I already do a lot of asteroid work and I'm moving across to variable stars and exoplanets.

Best wishes,

Eric  (UK)