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Re: Fractional Pixels Origin? [message #47634 is a reply to message #47583] Fri, 17 February 2006 07:24 Go to previous messageGo to previous message
CJCrockett is currently offline  CJCrockett
Messages: 3
Registered: February 2006
Junior Member
Wow....thank you so much for all your replies, though I'm not quite
sure how to digest all of it.
The fractional pixels are the output of locating the centroid of a
comet in an image. The centroid then defines my center from which I
calculate aperture photometry. In the interest of getting the most
accurate results, I am using fractional pixel areas and hence need to
know where to start counting from "inside" the pixel.
Our images are in the FITS format, as a previous poster indicated. But
the centroiding algorithm knows nothing of FITS, it just receives a 2-d
image array and goes to town. If anyone has any familiarity with
astronomy libraries, I am using the CNTRD procedure in the Goddard
library which in turn uses DAOPHOT.
I understand now that there are several different conventions in use
(and my data set may actually be using two different conventions as
they are from two different sources)! I know that one source puts 0,0
at the center of the pixel. My data, using CNTRD, I don't know about.
Is there a test of some sort I can do to clear up the confusion?

Thanks again for the responses!

Regards,
Christopher Crockett
University of Maryland
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