spxfit

spxfit(imagename='', box='', region='', chans='', stokes='', axis=-1, mask='', minpts=1, multifit=False, spxtype='plp', spxest='', spxfix='', div='0', spxsol='', spxerr='', model='', residual='', wantreturn=True, stretch=False, logresults=True, logfile='', append=True, sigma='', outsigma='')[source]

Fit a 1-dimensional model(s) to an image(s) or region for determination of spectral index.

[Description] [Examples] [Development] [Details]

Parameters
  • imagename (variant=’’) - Name of the input image(s)

  • box (string=’’) - Rectangular region to select in direction plane. Default is to use the entire direction plane.

  • region (string=’’) - Region selection. Default is to use the full image.

  • chans (string=’’) - Channels to use. Default is to use all channels.

  • stokes (string=’’) - Stokes planes to use. Default is to use all Stokes planes.

  • axis (int=-1) - The profile axis. Default: use the spectral axis if one exists, axis 0 otherwise (<0).

  • mask (string=’’) - Mask to use. Default is none.

    mask != ''
    • stretch (bool=False) - Stretch the mask if necessary and possible?

  • minpts (int=1) - Minimum number of unmasked points necessary to attempt fit.

  • multifit (bool=False) - If true, fit a profile along the desired axis at each pixel in the specified region. If false, average the non-fit axis pixels and do a single fit to that average profile. Default False.

    multifit = True
    • spxsol (string=’’) - Name of the spectral index function coefficient solution image to write.

    • spxerr (string=’’) - Name of the spectral index function coefficient error image to write.

    • model (string=’’) - Name of model image. Default: do not write the model image (“”).

    • residual (string=’’) - Name of residual image. Default: do not write the residual image (“”).

  • spxtype (string=’plp’) - Type of function to fit. “plp” = power logarithmic polynomial, “ltp” = logarithmic transformed polynomial.

  • spxest (doubleVec=’’) - REQUIRED. Initial estimates as array of numerical values for the spectral index function coefficients. eg [1.5, -0.8] if fitting a plp function thought to be close to 1.5*(x/div)**(-0.8) or [0.4055, -0.8] if fitting an lpt function thought to be close to ln(1.5) - 0.8*ln(x/div).

  • spxfix (boolVec=’’) - Fix the corresponding spectral index function coefficients during the fit. True means hold fixed.

  • div (variant=’0’) - Divisor (numerical value or quantity) to use in the logarithmic terms of the plp or ltp function. 0 means calculate a useful value on the fly.

  • wantreturn (bool=True) - Should a record summarizing the results be returned?

  • logresults (bool=True) - Output results to logger?

  • logfile (string=’’) - File in which to log results. Default is not to write a logfile.

    logfile != ''
    • append (bool=True) - Append results to logfile? Logfile must be specified. Default is to append. False means overwrite existing file if it exists.

  • sigma ({string, stringVec, doubleVec, intVec}=’’) - Standard deviation array or image name(s).

    sigma != ''
    • outsigma (string=’’) - Name of output image used for standard deviation. Ignored if sigma is empty.

Returns

results (dict) - fitted parameters and information on fit quality and units of the axes, if wantreturn=True

Description

This task fits a power logarithmic polynomial or a logarithmic tranformed polynomial to one-dimensional profiles for determination of spectral indices.

This application performs a non-linear, least squares fits using the Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm of either a power logarithmic polynomial or a logarithmic tranformed polynomial to pixel values along a specified axis of an image or images. A description of the fitting algorithm may be found in AIPS++ Note 224 [1] and in Numerical Recipes [2]. These functions are most often used for fitting the spectral index and higher order terms of a spectrum. A power logarithmic polynomial (plp) has the form

y = c 0 *(x/div) [c 1 + c 2 *ln(x/div) + c 3 *ln(x/div) \(^2\) + … + c n *ln(x/div) \(^{(n-1)}\)]

In the case of fitting a spectral index, which is traditionally represented as \(\alpha\), the \(\alpha\) is equal to c 1.

A logarithmic transformed polynomial (ltp) is simply the result of this equation after taking the natural log of both sides so that it has the form

ln(y) = c 0 + c 1 *ln(x/div) + c 2 *ln(x/div) 2 + … + c n *ln(x/div) n

Because the logarithm of the ordinate values must be taken before fitting a logarithmic transformed polynomial, all non-positive pixel values are effectively masked for the purposes of fitting.

The coefficients of the two forms are equal to each other except that c 0 in the second equation is equal to ln(c 0) of the first.

In both cases, div is a numerical value used to scale abscissa values so they are closer to unity when they are sent to the fitter. This generally improves the probability that the fit will converge. This parameter may be specified via the div parameter. A value of 0 (the default) indicates that the application should determine a reasonable value for div, which is determined via

div = 10 \(int[log_{10}\sqrt{min(x)*max(x)}]\)

where min(x) and max(x) are the minimum and maximum abscissa values, respectively.

The number of values specified in the spxest array indicate the number of coefficients for which to solve. If multifit=True, the values provided in the spxest array are used as initial estimates at every pixel. So, for example, if S(\(\nu\)) is proportional to \(\nu^{\alpha}\) and you expect alpha to be near -0.8 and the value of S(\(\nu\)) is 1.5 at 10 \(^9\) Hz and your image(s) have spectral units of Hz, you would specify spxest=[1.5, -0.8] and div=1e9 when fitting a plp function, or spxest=[0.405, -0.8] and div=1e9 if fitting an ltp function close to ln(1.5) - 0.8*ln(x/div).

A CAUTIONARY NOTE

Note that the likelihood of getting a reliable solution increases with the number of good data points as well as the goodness of the initial estimate. It is possible that the first solution found might not be the best one, and so, if a solution is found, it is recommended that the fit be repeated using the solution of the previous fit as the initial estimate for the new fit. This process should be repeated until the solutions from one fit to the next differ only insignificantly. The convergent solution is very likely the best solution.

AXIS

The axis parameter indicates on which axis profiles should be fit; a negative value indicates the spectral axis should be used, or if one does not exist, that the zeroth axis should be used.

MINIMUM NUMBER OF PIXELS

The minpts parameter indicates the minimum number of unmasked pixels that must be present in order for a fit to be attempted. When multifit=True, positions with too few good points will be masked in any output images.

ONE FIT OF REGION AVERAGE OR PIXEL BY PIXEL FIT

The multifit parameter indicates if profiles should be fit at each pixel in the selected region (true), or if the profiles in that region should be averaged and the fit done to that average profile (false).

FUNCTION TYPE

Which function to fit is specified in the spxtype parameter. Only two values (case insensitive) are supported. A value of “plp” indicates that a power logarithmic polynomial should be fit. A value of “ltp” indicates a logarithmic transformed polynomial should be fit.

INCLUDING STANDARD DEVIATIONS OF PIXEL VALUES

If the standard deviations of the pixel values in the input image are known and they vary in the image (e.g. they are higher for pixels near the edge of the band), they can be included in the sigma parameter. This parameter takes either an array or an image name. The array or image must have one of three shapes:

  1. the shape of the input image,

  2. the same dimensions as the input image with the lengths of all axes being one except for the fit axis which must have length corresponding to its length in the input image, or

  3. be one dimensional with lenght equal the the length of the fit axis in the input image.

In cases 2 and 3, the array or pixels in sigma will be replicated such that the image that is ultimately used is the same shape as the input image. The values of sigma must be non-negative. It is only the relative values that are important. A value of 0 means that pixel should not be used in the fit. Other than that, if pixel A has a higher standard deviation than pixel B, then pixel A is noisier than pixel B and will receive a lower weight when the fit is done. The weight of a pixel is the usual

weight = \(\frac{1}{\sigma^2}\)

In the case of multifit=F, the sigma values at each pixel along the fit axis in the hyperplane perpendicular to the fit axis which includes that pixel are averaged and the resultant averaged standard deviation spectrum is the one used in the fit. Internally, sigma values are normalized such that the maximum value is 1. This mitigates a known overflow issue.

One can write the normalized standard deviation image used in the fit by specifying its name in outsigma. This image can then be used as sigma for subsequent runs.

RETURNED DICTIONARY STRUCTURE

The returned dictionary has a (necessarily) complex structure. First, there are keys “xUnit” and “yUnit” whose values are the abscissa unit and the ordinate unit described by simple strings. Next there are arrays giving a broad overview of the fit quality. These arrays have the shape of the specified region collapsed along the fit axis with the axis corresponding to the fit axis having length of 1:

ATTEMPTED: a boolean array indicating which fits were attempted (e.g. if too few unmasked points, a fit will not be attempted). CONVERGED: a boolean array indicating which fits converged. False if the fit was not attempted. VALID: a boolean array indicating which solutions fall within the specified valid ranges of parameter space (any solution for which a value or error is NaN is automatically marked as invalid) NITER: an int array indicating the number of iterations for each profile, <0 if the fit did not converge DIRECTION: a string array containing the world direction coordinate for each profile

There is a “type” array having number of dimensions equal to the number of dimensions in the above arrays plus one. The shape of the first n-1 dimensions is the same as the shape of the above arrays. The length of the last dimension is equal to the number of components fit. The values of this array are all “POWER LOGARITHMIC POLYNOMIAL” or “LOGARITHMIC TRANSFORMED POLYNOMIAL”, depending on which type function was fit.

There will be a subdictionary accessible via the “plp” or “ltp” key (depending on which type of function was fit) which will have subkeys “solution” and “error” which will each have an array of values. Each of these arrays will have one more dimension than the overview arrays described above. The shape of the first n-1 dimensions will be the same as the shape of the overview arrays described above, while the final dimension will have length equal to the number of parameters that were fit. Along this axis will be the corresponding fit result or associated error (depending on the array’s associated key) of the fit. In cases where the fit was not attempted or did not converge, a value of NAN will be present.

OUTPUT IMAGES

In addition to the returned dictionary, optionally one or more of any combination of output images can be written. The model and residual parameters indicate the names of the model and residual images to be written; empty values indicate that these images should not be written.

The parameters spxsol and spxerr are the names of the solution and error images to write, respectively. In cases where more than one coefficient are fit, the image names will be appended with an underscore followed by the relevant coefficient number (“_0”, “_1”, etc). These images contain the arrays for the associated parameter solutions or errors described in previous sections. Pixels for which fits were not attempted, did not converge, or converged but have values of NaN (not a number) or INF (infinity) will be masked as bad.

LPT vs PLP

Ultimately, the choice of which functional form to use in determining the spectral index is up to the user and should be based on the scientific goals. However, below is a summary of one user’s experience and preferences as an example:

If the weights are known or can be determined from the images (e.g. the source-free image rms and a fractional calibration error) then a weighted fit using the non-linear (power-law) model is preferred. An unweighted fit using the non-linear model will, in general, give far too much leverage to large flux values.

If the weights are unknown or will not be considered by the fitting algorithm, then the log-transformed polynomial model is preferred. However, this does not work well in low signal-to-noise regions. A conservative mask could be created such that only high S/N areas are fit, but this could hinder many science objectives.

Task specific parameters summary

axis

The profile axis. Default (<0): use the spectral axis if one exists, axis 0 otherwise.

minpts

Minimum number of unmasked points necessary to attempt fit.

multifit

If true, fit a profile along the desired axis at each pixel in the specified region. If false, average the non-fit axis pixels and do a single fit to that average profile. Default False.

spxtype

Type of function to fit. “plp” = power logarithmic polynomial, “ltp” = logarithmic transformed polynomial.

spxest

REQUIRED. Initial estimates as array of numerical values for the spectral index function coefficients. eg [1.5, -0.8] if fitting a plp function thought to be close to 1.5*(x/div)**(-0.8) or [0.4055, -0.8] if fitting an lpt function thought to be close to ln(1.5) - 0.8*ln(x/div).

spxfix

Fix the corresponding spectral index function coefficients during the fit. True means hold fixed.

div

Divisor (numerical value or quantity) to use in the logarithmic terms of the plp or ltp function. 0 means calculate a useful value on the fly.

spxsol

Name of the spectral index function coefficient solution image to write.

spxerr

Name of the spectral index function coefficient error image to write.

model

Name of model image. Default (“”): do not write the model image.

residual

Name of residual image. Default (“”): do not write the residual image.

wantreturn

Should a record summarizing the results be returned?

logresults

Output results to logger?

logfile

File in which to log results. Default is not to write a logfile.

append

Append results to logfile? Logfile must be specified. Default is to append. False means overwrite existing file if it exists.

sigma

Standard deviation array or image name(s).

outsigma

Name of output image used for standard deviation. Ignored if sigma is empty.

Bibliography

Examples
# fit c0, c1, and c2 in a power log polynomial using two images. Do a pixel by pixel fit. Use initial estimates of
# c0=0.5, c1=2, and c2=0.1. Scale frequencies by dividing them by 1GHz. Write the solution images.

res = spxfit(imagename=["im0.im","im1.im"], multifit=True, spxtype="plp", spxest=[0.5,2,0.1], div="1GHz",
             spxsol="myplpsolutions.im")
Development

No additional development details

Parameter Details

Detailed descriptions of each function parameter

imagename (variant='') - Name of the input image(s)
box (string='') - Rectangular region to select in direction plane. Default is to use the entire direction plane.
region (string='') - Region selection. Default is to use the full image.
chans (string='') - Channels to use. Default is to use all channels.
stokes (string='') - Stokes planes to use. Default is to use all Stokes planes.
axis (int=-1) - The profile axis. Default: use the spectral axis if one exists, axis 0 otherwise (<0).
mask (string='') - Mask to use. Default is none.
minpts (int=1) - Minimum number of unmasked points necessary to attempt fit.
multifit (bool=False) - If true, fit a profile along the desired axis at each pixel in the specified region. If false, average the non-fit axis pixels and do a single fit to that average profile. Default False.
spxtype (string='plp') - Type of function to fit. “plp” = power logarithmic polynomial, “ltp” = logarithmic transformed polynomial.
spxest (doubleVec='') - REQUIRED. Initial estimates as array of numerical values for the spectral index function coefficients. eg [1.5, -0.8] if fitting a plp function thought to be close to 1.5*(x/div)**(-0.8) or [0.4055, -0.8] if fitting an lpt function thought to be close to ln(1.5) - 0.8*ln(x/div).
spxfix (boolVec='') - Fix the corresponding spectral index function coefficients during the fit. True means hold fixed.
div (variant='0') - Divisor (numerical value or quantity) to use in the logarithmic terms of the plp or ltp function. 0 means calculate a useful value on the fly.
spxsol (string='') - Name of the spectral index function coefficient solution image to write.
spxerr (string='') - Name of the spectral index function coefficient error image to write.
model (string='') - Name of model image. Default: do not write the model image (“”).
residual (string='') - Name of residual image. Default: do not write the residual image (“”).
wantreturn (bool=True) - Should a record summarizing the results be returned?
stretch (bool=False) - Stretch the mask if necessary and possible?
logresults (bool=True) - Output results to logger?
logfile (string='') - File in which to log results. Default is not to write a logfile.
append (bool=True) - Append results to logfile? Logfile must be specified. Default is to append. False means overwrite existing file if it exists.
sigma ({string, stringVec, doubleVec, intVec}='') - Standard deviation array or image name(s).
outsigma (string='') - Name of output image used for standard deviation. Ignored if sigma is empty.