Simulation Guide Component Lists (CASA 3.3): Difference between revisions

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"cl.addcomponent" creates a new component centered at "direction", with a flux of 1 Jy at a frequency of 230 GHz, a Gaussian shape of 0.1' by 0.05' with a position angle of 45 degrees.
"cl.addcomponent" creates a new component centered at "direction", with a flux of 1 Jy at a frequency of 230 GHz, a Gaussian shape of 0.1' by 0.05' with a position angle of 45 degrees.
"ia.fromshape" creates a new, empty CASA image with the name and dimensions given.
"cs.coordsys" gets the coordinate system of the image.
"cs.setunits" defines the units of the four axes of the new CASA image.
"cell_rad" will be the cell size and units in this CASA image, 0.1"
"cs.setincrement" tells CASA that RA increases to the right, Dec increases going up, and in a few lines that the one channel is 1 GHz wide.
"cs.setreferencevalue" sets the center of the image in RA, Dec, and frequency.
"ia.setcoordsys" puts the coordinates and frequencies into the image header.
"ia.setbrightnessunit" defines the brightness unit (Jy per pixel) of the CASA image.
"ia.modify" puts the Gaussian component into the image
"exportfits" writes the resultant CASA image as a FITS file (not strictly necessary for this guide, but useful to know in general).
As usual, more information can be found via the help in CASA
<source lang="python">
# In CASA
help(ia.modify)  # syntax for help with toolkit or CASA tasks
help("exportfits") # syntax for CASA tasks, but not the toolkit
</source>


==Simulating Observations with a FITS Image and a Component List==
==Simulating Observations with a FITS Image and a Component List==

Revision as of 12:00, 25 October 2011

Simulating Observations in CASA

This guide is applicable to CASA version 3.3.

To create a script of the Python code on this page see Extracting scripts from these tutorials.

Explanation of the guide

When planning an interferometric observation it is often useful to simulate observations of very simple objects, like point sources, Gaussians, and disks. In CASA, observations can be simulated using task sim_observe and analyzed using task sim_analyze. This guide will demonstrate how to simulate an ALMA observations of a Gaussian and some point sources using these tasks as well as the CASA Toolkit.

We begin by using component lists in the Toolkit to create an image of a Gaussian flux distribution, and this will be saved as a FITS file. The fits file will them be "observed" using sim_observe and sim_analyze along with four point sources, added via the componentlist parameter. Finally, we show how the same observations could have been done without any skymodel in sim_observe, instead using only component lists.

Getting Started

To get started you need CASA version 3.3

To install CASA, follow the instructions given on the Obtaining CASA page.

CASA Basics

CASA is the post-processing package for ALMA and EVLA and can handle both interferometric and single dish data. To get a brief introduction to sim_observe and sim_analyze, the tasks within CASA that we will use here, go to Simulation Guide for New Users. To learn more about CASA in general, go to the CASA homepage. Walk-throughs of CASA data reduction for a variety of data sets can be found on the CASA Guides website.

Once you have installed CASA, you can launch it by typing "casapy" at the prompt or by double-clicking on the icon, depending on your system and preferences.

Making a Simple FITS Image

Here we show how to create a simple FITS image using the CASA tasks and the toolkit. The example here will be that of a Gaussian flux distribution. Enter the following lines at the CASA prompt:

# In CASA
direction = "J2000 10h00m00.0s -30d00m00.0s"
cl.done()
cl.addcomponent(dir=direction, flux=1.0, fluxunit='Jy', freq='230.0GHz', shape="Gaussian", 
                majoraxis="0.1arcmin", minoraxis='0.05arcmin', positionangle='45.0deg')
ia.fromshape("Gaussian.im",[256,256,1,1],overwrite=True)
cs=ia.coordsys()
cs.setunits(['rad','rad','','Hz'])
cell_rad=qa.convert(qa.quantity("0.1arcsec"),"rad")['value']
cs.setincrement([-cell_rad,cell_rad],'direction')
cs.setreferencevalue([qa.convert("10h",'rad')['value'],qa.convert("-30deg",'rad')['value']],type="direction")
cs.setreferencevalue("230GHz",'spectral')
cs.setincrement('1GHz','spectral')
ia.setcoordsys(cs.torecord())
ia.setbrightnessunit("Jy/pixel")
ia.modify(cl.torecord(),subtract=False)
exportfits(imagename='Gaussian.im',fitsimage='Gaussian.fits',overwrite=True)

The first line defines a string "direction" which will be the center of the Gaussian flux distribution.

"cl.done" closes any open component lists, if any.

"cl.addcomponent" creates a new component centered at "direction", with a flux of 1 Jy at a frequency of 230 GHz, a Gaussian shape of 0.1' by 0.05' with a position angle of 45 degrees.

"ia.fromshape" creates a new, empty CASA image with the name and dimensions given.

"cs.coordsys" gets the coordinate system of the image.

"cs.setunits" defines the units of the four axes of the new CASA image.

"cell_rad" will be the cell size and units in this CASA image, 0.1"

"cs.setincrement" tells CASA that RA increases to the right, Dec increases going up, and in a few lines that the one channel is 1 GHz wide.

"cs.setreferencevalue" sets the center of the image in RA, Dec, and frequency.

"ia.setcoordsys" puts the coordinates and frequencies into the image header.

"ia.setbrightnessunit" defines the brightness unit (Jy per pixel) of the CASA image.

"ia.modify" puts the Gaussian component into the image

"exportfits" writes the resultant CASA image as a FITS file (not strictly necessary for this guide, but useful to know in general).

As usual, more information can be found via the help in CASA

# In CASA
help(ia.modify)  # syntax for help with toolkit or CASA tasks
help("exportfits") # syntax for CASA tasks, but not the toolkit

Simulating Observations with a FITS Image and a Component List

Simulating Observations with Just a Component List

Simulating Observations in CASA