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NAME

       muse_standard - Create a flux response curve from a standard star exposure.

SYNOPSIS

       esorex muse_standard [OPTIONS] FILE.sof

DESCRIPTION

       Merge  pixel tables from all IFUs and correct for differential atmospheric refraction, when necessary. To
       derive the flux response curve, integrate the flux of all objects detected within the field of view using
       the given profile. Select one object as the standard star (either the brightest or the one  nearest  one,
       depending on --select) and compare its measured fluxes to tabulated fluxes to derive the sensitivity over
       wavelength. Postprocess this sensitivity curve to mark wavelength ranges affected by telluric absorption.
       Interpolate  over  the  telluric  regions  and  derive a telluric correction spectrum for them. The final
       response curve is then linearly extrapolated to the largest possible MUSE wavelength range  and  smoothed
       (with  the method given by --smooth). The derivation of the telluric correction spectrum assumes that the
       star has a smooth spectrum within the telluric regions. If there are more than one exposure given in  the
       input  data,  the  derivation  of the flux response and telluric corrections are done separately for each
       exposure. For each exposure, an image containing the extracted stellar spectra and the datacube used  for
       flux  integration  are  saved,  together  with collapsed images for each given filter. In MUSE´s WFM data
       (both AO and non-AO), the Moffat profile is a good approximation of the actual PSF.  Using  the  smoothed
       profile ("smoffat") helps to increase the S/N and in most cases removes systematics. In NFM, however, the
       profile is a combination of a wide PSF plus the central AO-corrected peak, which cannot be fit well by an
       analytical  profile.  In  this  case  the  circular  aperture  is the best way to extract the flux. Using
       --profile="auto" (the default) selects these options to give the best flux extraction for most cases.

OPTIONS

       --profile <str>
              Type of flux integration to use. "gaussian", "moffat",  and  "smoffat"  use  2D  profile  fitting,
              "circle"  and  "square" are non-optimal aperture flux integrators. "smoffat" uses smoothing of the
              Moffat parameters from an initial fit,  to  derive  physically  meaningful  wavelength-  dependent
              behavior.  "auto"  selects  the smoothed Moffat profile for WFM data and circular flux integration
              for NFM. (str; default: ´auto´). The full name of this option for the EsoRex configuration file is
              muse.muse_standard.profile [default = auto].

       --select <str>
              How to select the star for flux  integration,  "flux"  uses  the  brightest  star  in  the  field,
              "distance"  uses  the  detection  nearest  to the approximate coordinates of the reference source.
              (str; default: ´distance´). The full name of this option for  the  EsoRex  configuration  file  is
              muse.muse_standard.select [default = distance].

       --smooth <str>
              How  to  smooth  the  response  curve  before  writing  it to disk. "none" does not do any kind of
              smoothing (such a response  curve  is  only  useful,  if  smoothed  externally;  "median"  does  a
              median-filter of 15 Angstrom half-width; "ppoly" fits piecewise cubic polynomials (each one across
              2x150  Angstrom  width) postprocessed by a sliding average filter of 15 Angstrom half-width. (str;
              default:  ´ppoly´).  The  full  name  of  this  option  for  the  EsoRex  configuration  file   is
              muse.muse_standard.smooth [default = ppoly].

       --lambdamin <float>
              Cut off the data below this wavelength after loading the pixel table(s). (float; default: 4000.0).
              The  full  name  of  this option for the EsoRex configuration file is muse.muse_standard.lambdamin
              [default = 4000.0].

       --lambdamax <float>
              Cut off the data above  this  wavelength  after  loading  the  pixel  table(s).  (float;  default:
              10000.0).   The   full   name   of   this   option   for   the   EsoRex   configuration   file  is
              muse.muse_standard.lambdamax [default = 10000.0].

       --lambdaref <float>
              Reference wavelength used for correction of differential atmospheric refraction. The R-band  (peak
              wavelength ~7000 Angstrom) that is usually used for guiding, is close to the central wavelength of
              MUSE,  so  a  value of 7000.0 Angstrom should be used if nothing else is known.  A value less than
              zero switches DAR correction off. (float; default: 7000.0). The full name of this option  for  the
              EsoRex configuration file is muse.muse_standard.lambdaref [default = 7000.0].

       --darcheck <str>
              Carry out a check of the theoretical DAR correction using source centroiding. If "correct" it will
              also  apply an empirical correction.  (str; default: ´none´). The full name of this option for the
              EsoRex configuration file is muse.muse_standard.darcheck [default = none].

       --filter <str>
              The filter name(s) to be used for the output field-of-view image. Each name has to  correspond  to
              an  EXTNAME  in  an  extension  of  the  FILTER_LIST file. If an unsupported filter name is given,
              creation of the respective image is omitted. If multiple filter names are given, they have  to  be
              comma   separated.   If   the   zeropoint   QC   parameters   are   wanted,   make   sure  to  add
              "Johnson_V,Cousins_R,Cousins_I". (str; default: ´white´). The full name of  this  option  for  the
              EsoRex configuration file is muse.muse_standard.filter [default = white].

       Note  that  it  is  possible to create a configuration file containing these options, along with suitable
       default values. Please refer to the details provided by the 'esorex --help' command.

SEE ALSO

       The full documentation for the muse pipeline can be downloaded as a PDF file using the following URL:

              ftp://ftp.eso.org/pub/dfs/pipelines/muse/muse-pipeline-cookbook-2.8.7.pdf

       An   overview   over   the   existing   ESO   pipelines    can    be    found    on    the    web    page
       https://www.eso.org/sci/software/pipelines/.

       Basic documentation about the EsoRex program can be found at the esorex (1) man page.

       It   is   possible   to   call   the   pipelines   from   python   using  the  python-cpl  package.   See
       https://packages.python.org/python-cpl/index.html for further information.

       The  other  recipes  of  the  muse   pipeline   are   muse_ampl(7),   muse_astrometry(7),   muse_bias(7),
       muse_create_sky(7), muse_dark(7), muse_exp_align(7), muse_exp_combine(7), muse_flat(7), muse_geometry(7),
       muse_illum(7),   muse_lingain(7),   muse_lsf(7),   muse_qi_mask(7),   muse_scibasic(7),  muse_scipost(7),
       muse_scipost_apply_astrometry(7),   muse_scipost_calibrate_flux(7),    muse_scipost_combine_pixtables(7),
       muse_scipost_correct_dar(7),            muse_scipost_correct_rv(7),            muse_scipost_make_cube(7),
       muse_scipost_raman(7),         muse_scipost_subtract_sky(7),         muse_scipost_subtract_sky_simple(7),
       muse_twilight(7), muse_wavecal(7)

VERSION

       muse_standard 2.8.7

AUTHOR

       Peter Weilbacher <https://support.eso.org>

BUG REPORTS

       Please  report  any  problems to https://support.eso.org. Alternatively, you may send a report to the ESO
       User Support Department <usd-help@eso.org>.

LICENSE

       This file is part of the MUSE Instrument Pipeline Copyright (C) 2005, 2019 European Southern Observatory

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  it  under  the  terms  of  the  GNU
       General  Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
       (at your option) any later version.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY  WARRANTY;  without  even
       the  implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public
       License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not,  write
       to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA

muse_standard                                         2.8.7                                     MUSE_STANDARD(7)