StarXterminator and small galaxies

I recently started processing my data on the Abell 2218 cluster. It's seems StarXterminator removes the small galaxies in the cluster, and I would like to process the stars separately, mostly because the cluster needs more stretching than the stars.
How can we deal with this? Would making a mask be appropriate?

Comments

  • Just out of curiosity... it does this on a linear image?
    -the Blockhead
  • Hello, yes I've tried it on the linear image. I was able to detect the gravitational lensing in the cluster, but I wondered if there is a way to remove the stars without the small galaxies. Given that they are so small I presume StarXterminator thinks they are stars.
    This is the image in question: https://www.astrobin.com/full/1g1vn0/0/#
    I am going through the PI Fundamentals, and I think there is much to improve in my processing, but for my first image, it looks ok.
  • Ah... it looks a bit undersampled (and perhaps you used BXT). So, yes, the galaxies will look like stars. 
    There is a small chance if you drizzled the date it *might* help... but no guarantees. 
    I do not know of a good (non-selective) way to do what you want. Yes, masking might help. You could blend in a GHS or masked stretch region of the cluster...but these things are very hackish. 
    (a bigger telescope would definitely help for this object :) ).

    -the Blockhead
  • The data was drizzled 2x. I dithered every frame just to be sure. I think I pushed BXT a little too far.
    I will experiment, since I have a ton of data on the object. For example if you look closely there are still some dust donuts remnants in the image. A couple of days ago I did experiment with a synthetic flat (tutorial found on YouTube), and to my surprise the synthetic flat did a wonderful job, also the background looked more even. Did you experiment with this?
    Another mistake I probably did was mixing darks from 2021,2022,2023 sessions into one folder, same for biases. Today I was renaming the darks and biases files with Y_2021,Y_2022,Y_2023 keywords to see if there is a difference.
    Yes a bigger telescope would help, but I love the plug and play capability of a nice refractor :)

  • I managed to apply the set of darks and biases for each session as it should be. I forgot that WBPP can use multiple keywords. The downside was that I had to rename about 3000 fits files. In the end the name scheme is like this:
    For the 2023 session:
    • For a luminance sub: Abell2218_Session_1072023_Y_2023_Lum_01.fits
    • For a coresponding dark or bias: Dark_Y_2023_01.fits, Bias_Y_2023_01.fits
    • For a flat: Abell2218_Session_1072023_Y_2023_Lum_Flat_01.fits

    Keywords for WBPP: Session, Y
    The resulting Luminance master was a much better.
    I discovered the GAME mask script, and I was able to apply an elliptical mask on the centre cluster, and then run SXT. The resulting star image did not contain the small galaxies, so it's a step forward
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