In recent years, there has been a proliferation of wide-field sky surveys to search for a variety of transient objects. Using relatively short focal lengths, the optics of these systems produce undersampled stellar images often marred by a variety of aberrations. As participants in such activities, we have developed a new algorithm for image subtraction that no longer requires high-quality reference images for comparison. The computational efficiency is comparable with similar procedures currently in use. The general technique is cross-convolution: two convolution kernels are generated to make a test image and a reference image separately transform to match as closely as possible. In analogy to the optimization technique for generating smoo...
We present a new technique for choosing spatial regions for X-ray spectroscopy, called "contour binn...
International audienceAstronomical images from optical photometric surveys are typically contaminate...
Most often, astronomers are interested in a source (e.g., moving, variable, or extreme in some colou...
In recent years, there has been a proliferation of wide-field sky surveys to search for a variety of...
International audienceImage subtraction is a method by which one image is matched against another by...
This thesis examines the application of massively parallel processing to the computationally intensi...
In astronomy multiple images are frequently obtained at the same position of the sky for follow-up c...
Large sky surveys are increasingly relying on image subtraction pipelines for real-time (and archiva...
Direct imaging of exoplanets is limited by bright quasi-static speckles in the point spread function...
This thesis presents a new and scalable implementation of an optimal image subtraction (termed “OIS...
It is demonstrated that non-constant kernel solution, that can fit the spatial variations of the ker...
A new method for improving the resolution of astronomical images is presented. It is based on the pr...
Current synoptic sky surveys monitor large areas of the sky to find variable and transient astronomi...
We present graphic, a new angular differential imaging reduction pipeline where all geometric image ...
A new method is presented for determining the point spread function (PSF) of images that lack brigh...
We present a new technique for choosing spatial regions for X-ray spectroscopy, called "contour binn...
International audienceAstronomical images from optical photometric surveys are typically contaminate...
Most often, astronomers are interested in a source (e.g., moving, variable, or extreme in some colou...
In recent years, there has been a proliferation of wide-field sky surveys to search for a variety of...
International audienceImage subtraction is a method by which one image is matched against another by...
This thesis examines the application of massively parallel processing to the computationally intensi...
In astronomy multiple images are frequently obtained at the same position of the sky for follow-up c...
Large sky surveys are increasingly relying on image subtraction pipelines for real-time (and archiva...
Direct imaging of exoplanets is limited by bright quasi-static speckles in the point spread function...
This thesis presents a new and scalable implementation of an optimal image subtraction (termed “OIS...
It is demonstrated that non-constant kernel solution, that can fit the spatial variations of the ker...
A new method for improving the resolution of astronomical images is presented. It is based on the pr...
Current synoptic sky surveys monitor large areas of the sky to find variable and transient astronomi...
We present graphic, a new angular differential imaging reduction pipeline where all geometric image ...
A new method is presented for determining the point spread function (PSF) of images that lack brigh...
We present a new technique for choosing spatial regions for X-ray spectroscopy, called "contour binn...
International audienceAstronomical images from optical photometric surveys are typically contaminate...
Most often, astronomers are interested in a source (e.g., moving, variable, or extreme in some colou...