Cloudy SolarSoftware

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Latest revision as of 21:49, 18 November 2010


Nugget
Number: 131
1st Author: Laszlo I. Etesi
2nd Author: Brian R. Dennis
Published: 2010 July 5
Next Nugget: Harmonic Oscillations
Previous Nugget: Albedo and the modification of RHESSI results
List all



Contents

Introduction

The analysis of solar observations, for example from RHESSI data, almost invariably requires the use of data from other sources. A single database seldom has enough breadth to tackle the complex problems that arise. Flares happen in the solar atmosphere, over vast ranges of physical parameters such as plasma density and temperature. Accordingly we often turn to many sets of data from other satellites and from ground-based solar telescopes to try to complete the picture. But how do we find out what data may exist for a given event, and then conveniently access these data and incorporate them into a comprehensive analysis?

In this Nugget we describe a new tool that we have developed for the solar physics community in collaboration with the Virtual Solar Observatory (VSO). Our goal is to provide an integrated analysis experience in the IDL programming language that is both easy-to-use for the casual observers but can also be used for detailed scientific analysis by more knowledgeable users.

The current mode of operation for solar data analysis begins with the retrieval of raw data from somewhere on the internet (i.e. the Cloud). New tools such as the VSO have been developed to make this task easier as solar data are hosted on a multitude of websites. After the appropriate data files have been retrieved, the bulk of the work (the preparation, display, and analysis of the data) is performed locally on a user's desktop or laptop computer. This mode of operation places a large burden on the user as it is then their responsibility to keep up to date with all the changes in software and instrument-specific calibrations, etc. necessary for each of these steps. In order to alleviate this problem, we have developed a new extended analysis environment (Cloud Computing), where IDL has access to services available on other computers through the Internet. This environment can easily be accessed either by using the graphical user interface (GUI) called SHOW_SYNOP (to show synoptic solar data) or by typing commands directly into the IDL command-line.

SHOW_SYNOP IDL Widget

Before we begin, it is important to note the following minimum requirements to run our software suite. You will need

This should not be a problem for a standard computer running up-to-date IDL.

SHOW_SYNOP provides the starting point for retrieving, "prepping," displaying, and analyzing solar data of interest to the user. You can most easily begin your session either by typing SHOW_SYNOP in the IDL command-line or by using the "Synoptic..." link in the RHESSI GUI (started by typing HESSI in the command line). SHOW_SYNOP provides the simple GUI interface shown in Figure 5.

The first function of SHOW_SYNOP is that it provides an easy-to-use interface to the VSO directly in IDL, and can download raw data directly to your computer. These data can then be displayed with our GUI plotting suite, PLOTMAN, which can handle different data types (light curves, images, and spectra), and perform basic data analysis.

The workflow within this overall integrated environment is shown in Figure 1, where the numbers correspond to the three steps explained below. Note that all of the operations can be controlled using either GUIs or through the IDL command-line, or, and this is often the most efficient approach, through a combination of the two.

Another important feature of SHOW_SYNOP is that it can access our new pre-processing server (PrepServer) that provides remote execution of instrument-specific data preparation procedures. This means that SHOW_SYNOP can provide you with up-to-date fully-calibrated data! The way this works is that when you ask SHOW_SYNOP (running on your local computer) for a particular data file, it asks the PrepServer (running on a remote computer) to retrieve the file, process it as necessary, and send the calibrated file directly to you. You can then display and analyze the data as usual in SHOW_SYNOP.

Our environment supports data from a growing number of solar instruments listed below, with additional instruments to be added as the data become available.

As an introduction to this we will guide you through a simple example on how to use SHOW_SYNOP.

Step 1: Finding the Data

SHOW_SYNOP shown in Figures 5 and 6 is an IDL GUI to search for and retrieve instrument data within a specified time interval using the VSO or other data finding facilities.

Search results can be directly downloaded into the active SSW IDL environment or first pre-processed through our prep-server. To start searching with SHOW_SYNOP, first open the GUI by typing SHOW_SYNOP in your SSW IDL environment command-line. The red box in Figure 5 highlights the VSO search form with "Start Time" and "End Time" specifying the search interval, and "remote sites ->" defining the instrument (TRACE in this example). Click on the "Search" button to query the VSO for data files that will be displayed in the list below the search form shown in the green box in Figure 6. All of this capability can also be obtained by executing IDL scripts from the command-line.

Currently, SHOW_SYNOP can search for data from the following instruments:

Step 2: Pre-processing

Typically, instrument data found with the VSO are unprocessed level-0 data (i.e., no calibrations have been performed). The PrepServer offers remote pre-processing of those data from within SHOW_SYNOP or from the IDL command-line before or after downloading to the user's computer. The big advantage is that the user does not have to maintain instrument-specific data analysis procedures or calibration files on his computer. Once the files containing the data of interest have been retrieved and prepped (calibrated) if necessary, the file names are displayed in the SHOW_SYNOP window (green box in Figure 6).

For more details on the prep-server including accessing it from the IDL command-line, click here

Step 3: Visualizing

The data are visualized with PLOTMAN, which handles different data types such as light curves, images, spectra, and spectrograms. PLOTMAN provides basic display operations such as zooming, image overlays, solar rotation, etc. To display data with PLOTMAN from within SHOW_SYNOP, simply select a data file (Figure 6, blue box) and click "Display". If the data file has already been pre-processed, it will be displayed immediately in a PLOTMAN window. Otherwise, it is first sent to the PrepServer for processing. If multiple files have been selected, all are displayed in the same PLOTMAN window for easy comparison. See Figures 2, 3, and 4 for images that were displayed using PLOTMAN.

Like all other GUIs discussed in this nugget, all the capabilities of PLOTMAN are also available from the command-line. Examples can be found here.

IDL Command-Line Tools

Step 1: Finding the Data

The VSO search can be initiated directly from the IDL command-line using the procedure VSO_FILES. Data for all the instruments available through the VSO can be searched with this procedure (please see the VSO web page for a list of supported instruments and detectors). VSO_FILES returns just the URLs of the data files that it finds. The files themselves can then be downloaded using SOCK_COPY or VSO_PREP (see next section).

Two different search strategies are supported in VSO_FILES:

Step 2: Pre-processing

VSO_PREP allows for data pre-processing from an IDL command-line without the requirement of a local installation of instrument software or calibration data. VSO_PREP takes as a minimum a local file or a URL to a remote file for a parameter. If a URL is provided then the PrepServer will download the data and send them back pre-processed; otherwise they are uploaded to the PrepServer, pre-processed, and downloaded.

The following instrument data can be pre-processed:

Step 3: Visualizing

PLOTMAN displays level-0 and pre-processed data. It is integrated with VSO_PREP and allows visualizing data returned by VSO_PREP with one command.

Examples

Example 1


  xrt_file = vso_files('25-Jan-2007 06:57', instr='xrt')
  vso_prep, xrt_file, oprep=xrt_obj
  xrt_obj->plotman, /colors, plotman=p


Example 2


  eit_files = vso_files('25-Jan-2007 06:45', '25-Jan-2007 07:05', instr='eit')
  FOR i=0, N_ELEMENTS(eit_files)-1 DO BEGIN $
   vso_prep, eit_files[i], oprep=eit_obj & $
   eit_obj->plotman, /colors, plotman=p & $
  ENDFOR


Example 3


  vso_prep, instrument='rhessi', im_time_interval=['25-Jan-2007 06:53:44', '25-Jan-2007 06:57:40'], $
   image_alg='clean', im_energy_binning=[6,12], oprep=rhessi_obj
  rhessi_obj->plotman, plotman=p

Conclusion

In this Nugget, we have described an integrated way of searching and retrieving, pre-processing, and visualizing solar data from an IDL session. We introduced three new computer tools - SHOW_SYNOP, the PrepServer, and PLOTMAN. They are designed to simplify the display and inter-comparison of data from a wide range of solar instruments. Further details are available in the documentation listed below. We encourage you to try the examples given here. You can use the SHOW_SYNOP GUI or enter the scripts directly in the IDL command line, as you wish. Then try out these tools for your own specific needs. We will be very interested in your feedback and any suggestions for improvements. Please use the contact information below to let us know what you think, both positive and negative.

For the future, we plan to extend the list of instruments that SHOW_SYNOP and the PrepServer can handle, and further improve our support for multi-instrument analysis. We will continue working closely with the solar physics community and the service providers (e.g. the VSO) to refine and enhance these tools.

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