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Upper limits

  As an object for further discussion it is helpful to have a copy of the upper limits map produced by PSS for the demonstration image. A copy can be created using the command,

   > PSS ast_demo:pss_demo 1.01 mode=upmap map=demo_map NOEXPERT \
which creates an upper limit flux map called DEMO_MAP at 68% confidence. Figure 3 is copy of this image contoured at 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 75, 100, 150, 200, 250, 300 and 350 counts.

Two features of the upper limit map are worth noting immediately,

The first can be explained in terms of the PSS algorithm. As stated previously PSS has a simple data model, consisting soley of a background plus one source. When finding upper limits the source part of the model is at the position of the requested upper limit (or the pixel centre in upper limit mapping mode), and hence any nearby strong source makes this a poor representation of the data. To find upper limits near bright sources using PSS it is necessary to either subtract the contaminating source (Section 4.13), or to ignore it (Sections 6.6 and 7.4).

The upper limit flux map is clumpy simply because of local variations in the background. Test positions in an image sited in areas deficient in counts with respect to the local background constrain a necessarily positive source flux more tightly than positions in areas with excess counts. The justification for this statement can be found in Appendix gif.

The restricted scope of the above analysis must be emphasised. The upper limit flux map is the flux of a point source whose surface brightness is exactly represented by the psf system, at a confidence level 68%. This raises the question of what is required by a particular upper limits analysis -- the answers to two questions should be clear in the mind of anyone using PSS in UPLIM mode,

Practical examples may serve to clarify the above. Suppose we had a poorly constrained source position corresponding to image position in Figure 3, with an error circle of radius 5 arcmin. By our first criterion we should use UPMAP mode, as our uncertainity is comparable to if not greater than the clumpiness in the upper limit surface. The largest upper limit flux within the circle about 26 counts. A supposed stellar object at the same position with an uncertainty of say 1 arcsecond allows use of UPLIM mode and would give a result of only 2.5 counts.



next up previous contents
Next: Using data QUALITY Up: Techniques Previous: Simulation



Asterix
Tue Oct 7 12:03:17 BST 1997