Correct interpolation and dark pixel offset#16
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krisgry wants to merge 1 commit intoStefanSimis:masterfrom
Open
Correct interpolation and dark pixel offset#16krisgry wants to merge 1 commit intoStefanSimis:masterfrom
krisgry wants to merge 1 commit intoStefanSimis:masterfrom
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Owner
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Hi and thanks for the PR.
This is a long standing issue and it's great to know you have had some
confirmation from the manufacturer. The reason this wasn't already
implemented is that I have not yet been able to check how the instrument
calibration laboratories interpret the indexing. Fixing the issue at one
end but not the other could make things worse. I have acquired
documentation from Zeiss that, along with these experiments, should get us
closer to closure.
…On Fri, 26 Sept 2025, 11:48 Kristoffer Gryte, ***@***.***> wrote:
Hi,
I have tried to verify the calibration and dark-pixel offset in
ramses_calibrate.py by testing with a RAMSES sensor in an optical lab with
a mercury test tube. Below is a plot comparing the original pytrios code by
a modification done by my former colleague Artur Zolich. The vertical lines
are the expected peaks of mercury, at [365, 405, 435, 546] nm. As you can
see, the code by Zolich fits better.
image.png (view on web)
<https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cd2ab7fd-7ad3-432b-b730-3784009b1d35>
Let me know if you would like me to send you the numerical values used in
the plot, and/or the raw data from the sensor.
To be clear: this fix was made by Artur by comparing the output from MSDA
with pytrios. I know he has been in contact with you on that, via email. I
have also been in contact with Triosm, who confirm that there is an error
in the indexing in the interpolation in the manual (but frustratingly
became radio-silent after that), and one of our research partners who also
confirm having problems with this.
I hope that this PR can fix the problem, and clear the confusion.
Regards,
Kristoffer
------------------------------
You can view, comment on, or merge this pull request online at:
#16
Commit Summary
- 7b94b07
<7b94b07>
Correct interpolation and dark pixel offset
File Changes
(1 file <https://github.com/StefanSimis/PyTrios/pull/16/files>)
- *M* ramses_calibrate.py
<https://github.com/StefanSimis/PyTrios/pull/16/files#diff-1fa705d0105ef5b083aa60a5f14ba52bcb0a4d321abadbec608029fb91be4bff>
(8)
Patch Links:
- https://github.com/StefanSimis/PyTrios/pull/16.patch
- https://github.com/StefanSimis/PyTrios/pull/16.diff
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Author
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For completeness: below is how another repo that is dealing with calibration of trios ramses data in python handles the interpolation: https://github.com/hbliu104/PyRamses/blob/154df21a2dac0041f3585cffdc6ab0d706001c52/PyRamses.py#L336 Later in the code, the calibrated spectrum is accessed by discarding the first element (cal[1:]) |
Owner
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Hi, could you email me on my pml.ac.uk address so we can share a few bits
of documentation? Much appreciated!
…On Fri, 3 Oct 2025, 13:36 Kristoffer Gryte, ***@***.***> wrote:
*krisgry* left a comment (StefanSimis/PyTrios#16)
<#16 (comment)>
For completeness: below is how another repo that is dealing with
calibration of trios ramses data in python handles the interpolation:
https://github.com/hbliu104/PyRamses/blob/154df21a2dac0041f3585cffdc6ab0d706001c52/PyRamses.py#L336
Later in the code, the calibrated spectrum is accessed by discarding the
first element (cal[1:])
https://github.com/hbliu104/PyRamses/blob/154df21a2dac0041f3585cffdc6ab0d706001c52/PyRamses.py#L670
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Hi,
I have tried to verify the calibration and dark-pixel offset in ramses_calibrate.py by testing with a RAMSES sensor in an optical lab with a mercury test tube. Below is a plot comparing the original pytrios code by a modification done by my former colleague Artur Zolich. The vertical lines are the expected peaks of mercury, at [365, 405, 435, 546] nm. As you can see, the code by Zolich fits better.
Let me know if you would like me to send you the numerical values used in the plot, and/or the raw data from the sensor.
To be clear: this fix was made by Artur by comparing the output from MSDA with pytrios. I know he has been in contact with you on that, via email. I have also been in contact with Triosm, who confirm that there is an error in the indexing in the interpolation in the manual (but frustratingly became radio-silent after that), and one of our research partners who also confirm having problems with this.
I hope that this PR can fix the problem, and clear the confusion.
Regards,
Kristoffer