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Supported Software: MOPEXSPITZER HOME - SPITZER SCIENCE - INSTRUMENTS - SCIENCE USER SUPPORT - SEARCH |
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Purpose and DescriptionMOPEX (MOsaicker and Point source EXtractor) is the SSC's package for reducing and analyzing imaging data, as well as MIPS SED data. MOPEX includes the point source extraction package, APEX. The Spitzer data reduction pipeline produces individual Basic Calibrated Data (BCD) frames that can be input into MOPEX to produce mosaicked images before extracting the point sources with APEX or any other software of your choice.
MOPEX comes in two different interfaces (GUI and command-line), both of which come packaged together. We recommend that all new users start with the GUI, which is in the style of Spot/Leopard, and is more user-friendly than the command-line interface. The GUI contains a self-contained help system, but detailed documentation for MOPEX can be found on the MOPEX Online Manual page. New users are also recommended to check out the Data Reduction and Analysis Cookbooks, which offer a number of guided walk-throughs on how to reduce various types of Spitzer data. The MOPEX GUIThe MOPEX GUI is designed to allow the user to interactively set the many parameters in the processing modules, and then to examine the output of each step. Template parameter sets are available as a starting point, but users are strongly recommended to evaluate the process as it applies to their own data. Different datasets require different choices. The GUI includes module-by-module online help to allow easy access to the documentation. While the GUI provides an interactive interface to access the MOPEX software, the underlying scripts and binaries are the same as those available in the command-line interface. Scripts that run on the command line can be imported into the GUI, and settings selected in the GUI can be saved and exported for use on the command line. The scripts currently available through the GUI are overlap, mosaic, apex, apex_1frame, apex_qa and prf_estimate. Other useful scripts, such as flatfield are only available from the command line. Users are encouraged to check the full list of MOPEX scripts before writing their own code. Supported Platforms: Solaris 10+, Mac OSX 10.3+, RedHat Linux, Windows. Command-Line MOPEXThe command-line version of MOPEX consists of a set of perl scripts that are called by the user from the command line. Some of these scripts aren't yet available in the GUI, but may be useful for data manipulation. Users are encouraged to check them before writing their own code. Experienced users, or those with large volumes of data may prefer to use the command-line version of MOPEX since it is marginally faster and can be scripted. Experienced users may still find the enhanced documentation included in the GUI useful.
Supported Platforms: Solaris 10+, Mac OSX 10.3+, RedHat Linux Downloading and installing the softwareFollow these instructions for downloading and installing the software. Updating MOPEXAll updates are now done automatically through the GUI. To update either the GUI or the command-line version of MOPEX, start the GUI while connected to the internet. MOPEX will automatically download any available updates whenever it is restarted. To check for updates without re-starting MOPEX, go to the Options menu on the task bar and toggle Use Automatic Mopex Version Update off and back on again. Getting HelpSupport for MOPEX is available from the Spitzer Helpdesk but you can also check the extensive help function included in the GUI, the MOPEX Online Manual, the Data Reduction and Analysis Cookbooks, the list of common pitfalls listed below, the known bugs list and the FAQ page for answers to commonly asked questions. Important Notes and Common Pitfalls
User's GuidesOverview of Post-BCD processing (pdf) Pointing Refinement User's Guide (pdf) Data Reduction and Analysis Cookbooks Previous Manuals (superseded by the online MOPEX manual)Background Matching (overlap) User's Guide (pdf) Mosaicker User's Guide (pdf) APEX User's Guide (pdf) Full list of documentation, including Data Analysis Cookbooks Example namelists for MOPEXThe parameters set in these namelists are a reasonable starting point for most data sets, but not all. For example, BOTTOM_THRESHOLD and TOP_THRESHOLD parameters of outlier rejection (found under MOSAICOUTLIERIN) are presently set to 5 in the namelists for IRAC and MIPS-24, and to 3 for MIPS-70 and MIPS-160. However, these numbers are not optimal in all cases - a value of 5 is too low for IRAC coverage of ~50, and leads to false outlier detections (a value of 10 is more optimal). We recommend that users read the documentation linked at the top of this page, and experiment with the namelist settings to find the optimal settings for their dataset. A full list of input parameters for MOPEX can be found via the following links:
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This file was last modified on Wed Aug 13 16:27:16 2008.