TomograPy: A Fast, Instrument-Independent, Solar Tomography Software

Solar tomography has progressed rapidly in recent years thanks to the development of robust algorithms and the availability of more powerful computers. It can today provide crucial insights in solving issues related to the line-of-sight integration present in the data of solar imagers and coronagrap...

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Veröffentlicht in:Solar physics 2013-03, Vol.283 (1), p.227-245
Hauptverfasser: Barbey, N., Guennou, C., Auchère, F.
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container_title Solar physics
container_volume 283
creator Barbey, N.
Guennou, C.
Auchère, F.
description Solar tomography has progressed rapidly in recent years thanks to the development of robust algorithms and the availability of more powerful computers. It can today provide crucial insights in solving issues related to the line-of-sight integration present in the data of solar imagers and coronagraphs. However, there remain challenges such as the increase of the available volume of data, the handling of the temporal evolution of the observed structures, and the heterogeneity of the data in multi-spacecraft studies. We present a generic software package that can perform fast tomographic inversions that scales linearly with the number of measurements, linearly with the length of the reconstruction cube (and not the number of voxels), and linearly with the number of cores and can use data from different sources and with a variety of physical models: TomograPy ( http://nbarbey.github.com/TomograPy/ ), an open-source software freely available on the Python Package Index. For performance, TomograPy uses a parallelized-projection algorithm. It relies on the World Coordinate System standard to manage various data sources. A variety of inversion algorithms are provided to perform the tomographic-map estimation. A test suite is provided along with the code to ensure software quality. Since it makes use of the Siddon algorithm it is restricted to rectangular parallelepiped voxels but the spherical geometry of the corona can be handled through proper use of priors. We describe the main features of the code and show three practical examples of multi-spacecraft tomographic inversions using STEREO/EUVI and STEREO/COR1 data. Static and smoothly varying temporal evolution models are presented.
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subjects Algorithms
Astrophysics and Astroparticles
Atmospheric Sciences
Corona
Heterogeneity
Image Processing in the Petabyte Era
Physics
Physics and Astronomy
Software
Solar physics
Space Exploration and Astronautics
Space Sciences (including Extraterrestrial Physics
Spacecraft
Tomography
title TomograPy: A Fast, Instrument-Independent, Solar Tomography Software
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