Making quick-look flare spectrograms and movies

From EOVSA Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

This page documents instructions for EOVSA Scientists-on-Duty (SoD) to create quicklook flare spectrograms and movies as part of their daily routines.

Prerequisites

Login into the pipeline machine with your account:

ssh -X <your_user_name>@pipeline

If your default shell is not bash, enter bash by

bash

Configuring Access to the Interim Database (IDB)

To process and calibrate EOVSA raw "Interim" Database (IDB) data, access to the SQL database containing the calibration data is required. Perform the following steps to configure access:

Obtain Database Credentials: Contact Bin Chen to request the <username>, <account_name>, and <password> for database access.

Create a ".netrc" File: Create a ".netrc" file in your home directory ("$HOME") with the following contents, replacing "<username>," "<account_name>," and "<password>" with the actual database credentials:

machine eovsa-db0.cgb0fabhwkos.us-west-2.rds.amazonaws.com
           login <username>
           account <account_name>
           password <password>

Secure the ".netrc" File: To ensure that the file is only accessible by you, set its permissions to only allow owner read/write:

chmod 600 ~/.netrc

Set up the Python Environment

If the following is not already in your ~/.bashrc file, do the following

alias loadpyenv3.8='source /home/user/.setenv_pyenv38'
export EOVSADBJSON=/common/python/current/EOVSADB.json 

Load the Python 3.8 environment

loadpyenv3.8
ipython --pylab


Producing EOVSA quick-look flare spectrograms

Step 1: Checking Possible flares

Verify the possible flares on the daily EOVSA Solar Dynamic Spectrogram, for example:

http://ovsa.njit.edu/browser/?suntoday_date=2024-05-07

Daily spec 20240507.png

In this example, we see a possible flare that happened around 16:30 UT, which appears as a bright vertical stripe in the daily cross-power dynamic spectrum.

For better visualization and flare time precision, check the higher-resolution dynamic spectra at:

http://ovsa.njit.edu/flaremon/. "XSPYYYYMMDDHHMMSS.png" are the file names you are looking for.

XSP20240507153014.png

Since 2024-May-05, real-time flare detection figures and list are also available at:

http://ovsa.njit.edu/flaremon/FLM20240507.png http://ovsa.njit.edu/flaremon/flarelist/flarelist_2024-05-07.txt

FLM20240507.png

Step 2: Analyze the flare

Enter a working directory. We have limited space under /home, so it is better to go to your directory under /data1/.

cd /data1/<your_user_name>/

Obtain IDB files by providing a time range that encloses the flare. This step will also perform various calibration steps (absolute flux, attenuator gain, and feed rotation), so it may take a while (a few minutes per file). During the course, it will also ask you to confirm the files to be processed. Each IDB file is supposed to be 10-minute long. The naming convention is "IDByyyymmddhhmmdd," with the time indicating the start time of the file.

In Python, enter the following:

from eovsapy import flare_spec as fs 
from eovsapy.util import Time 
files = fs.calIDB(Time(['2024-05-07 16:20','2024-05-07 16:35'])) 
The timerange corresponds to these files (will take about 8 minutes to process)
/data1/eovsa/fits/IDB/20240507/IDB20240507162024
/data1/eovsa/fits/IDB/20240507/IDB20240507163024
Do you want to continue? (say no if you want to adjust timerange) [y/n]?y 

The previous step, if successful, will produce a list of IDB files under the current directory

In [21]: print(files)
['./IDB20240507162024', './IDB20240507163024']

Inspect the spectrograms and see if all the antennas look okay.

out = fs.inspect(files) 

Two figures will be produced. One shows the median cross-power spectrogram across a set of baselines defined by "uvrange" (default to 45 to 300 m). Another shows total-power spectrograms for all 16 antennas. (Note the antenna names go from 1 to 16. Ant 14 is the 27-m for calibrations, and Ants 15 and 16 are not yet connected to the system, but will be available soon.)

Specs quicklook.jpg
Tpspec all.jpg

Check the EOVSA Observing Log for antennas that were not working. We should also check the total-power spectrograms to see if there are any anomalies. In this example, except for Ant 10, all others look okay. However, the observing log says Ant 7 has issues with the Y polarization. Let us exclude both of them using the "ant_str" parameter. Let us also adjust the normalization for the total-power spectrograms using "vmin_tp" and "vmax_tp." To better see the flare in cross-power, you can also adjust the "vmin_xp" and "vmax_xp" parameters.

 out = fs.inspect(files, ant_str='ant1-6 ant8-9 ant11-13', vmin_xp=1., vmax_xp=120., vmin_tp=10., vmax_tp=1000.) 

Use the figure above to choose the background interval (bgidx), the maximum intensity and the frequencies.

The tpk (Time of the peak) determines the name of the resulting files (.png and .fits), and also determines the flare_id.

It's better to keep the formate of tpk as tpk='yyyy-mm-dd hh:mm:00' and add the flare time on wiki in the format of "hh:mm":

 f, ax0, ax1 = fs.make_plot(out,bgidx=[200,210],vmin=0.1, vmax=110, lcfreqs=[120,190,270,350],ant_str='ant1-6 ant8-9 ant11-13', tpk='2024-05-07 16:30:00') 
Eovsa.spec.flare id 20240507163000.png

A second background interval can be defined right after the first one, e.g., bg2idx=[1000,1010]

In this example, the output files are eovsa.spec.flare_id_20240507163000.fits and eovsa.spec.flare_id_20240507163000.fits.

At the end, copy the .fits file to /common/webplots/events/2024:

 cp eovsa.spec.flare_id_20240507163000.fits /common/webplots/events/2024 

and include the flare in the wiki Flare List:

http://ovsa.njit.edu/wiki/index.php/2024

The flare position have been copied from the https://solarmonitor.org/