Contents 

Mira Pro x64
Contents
New Features
Getting Application Help
About this Document
Tech Support
Getting Started
Glossary of Terms
Selecting Source Images
Setting Application Properties
Command Dialogs
Screen Capture
Mira's Special Folders
Changing the GUI Theme
Critical Concepts
Tip of the Day
Tutorials
Overview
Displaying an Image
Displaying an Image Set
Creating Plots from Images
Introduction to Image Registration
Making a Scatter Plot of Measurements
Using FITS Keywords to Analyze Image Data
Introduction to Aperture Photometry
Doing Time Series Photometry
Introduction to File Event Scripting
Cleaning Artifacts from an Image Set
Introduction to Source Extraction
Introduction to Astrometric Calibration
Examples
File Lists
Creating File Lists
Opening Files from File Lists
Images
The Boost Transfer Function Option
Image Rotation
Adding Labels to an Image
Editing the FITS Header
Image Registration
Plots
Plot Windows
Plotting Examples
Plotting an Averaged Line
Row Plots
Adding Series to a Line Profile Plot
Changing Plot Series Attributes
Plotting in World Coordinates
Comparison of Histogram Preferences
Contour Plotting Smoothing
3-D Plots
3-D Pixel Representations
3-D Z-Scaling
Measurements
Distance and Angle
Selecting Cells in a Grid Control
Tutorial: Making a Scatter Plot of Measurements
Fixing Header Problems in Photometric Data
Importing a Photometry Catalog
Image Basics
Image Types
Image Sets
Overview
Image Set Flags
Image Set Properties
Image Set Toolbar
Image Set Applications
Image Sets Menu
Duplicating an Image Set
File Lists
Overview
Creating file lists
Editing file lists
Opening files from file lists
Opening Images
Overview
File opening and saving commands
Using Drag & Drop
Opening image files
Creating an image catalog
Duplicating an Image
Duplicating an Image Set
Opening files from file Lists
Using File Opening Plug-ins
Selecting Source Images
Importing a Binary Image
Importing a Text Image
Saving Images
Saving a single image
Saving an image set
Saving all image set members
Saving an image set to a Folder
Saving an image set with a filename Suffix
Saving an image set to a file list
Exporting as a binary image
Exporting as a text image
Palettes
Overview
Image Palettes
Palette Pane
Palette Properties
Using the Palette Property Trackbars
Rubber Banding the Palette Graph
Importing Palettes
Transfer Functions
Overview
Choosing Transfer Function Properties
Using the Boost Transfer Function Option
Default Transfer Function Properties
Transfer Function Pane
Transfer Function Popup Menus
Image Cursor
Overview
Image Cursor Properties
Setting default and local properties
Image Window Properties
Image Plot Properties
Histogram Properties
Centroid Properties
FWHM Preferences
Radial Profile Properties
Palette Properties
Transfer Function Properties
General Properties
Selecting source images for commands
Overview
Image Display
Image Windows
Image Bar
Animation Bar
User Interface
User Interface Overview
Working with Toolbars
Initializing Toolbars and Docking Panes
Docking Panes
Command Dialogs
Command Toolbars
Main Message Pane
Image Cursor Toolbar
Image Keys Pane
Status Bar
Accelerator Keys
Profile Control
Status Bar
Save Window Position
GUI Theme
Changing the GUI theme
Context Menus
Image Context Menu
Image Context Menu for an image set
Plot Context Menu
3-D Plot Context Menu
Grid Context Menu
Dialog Styles
Command Dialogs
Dialog Buttons
Docking Panes
Overview of Docking Panes
Docking Panes Toolbar
Image Bar
Animation Bar
Image Keys Pane
Measurement Panes
Initializing Toolbars and Docking Panes
Property Profiles for Commands
Overview
Profile Control
Grid Controls
Overview
Report Windows
Grid Context Menu
Measurement Panes
Table Properties
Overview
Table Appearance Properties
Table Printing Properties
Menus
Tear-off menus
Main Context Menu
Default Menu Bar
Align Images Menu
Pictures of Menus
Creating new text documents
Default File Menu
Calibration Menu
Diagnostics menu
Edit Menu
File Menu
Measure Menu
Mira Windows
Image Windows
Plot Windows
Grid Controls
Image
Overview
Animation Pane
Image Bar
Image Set Toolbar
Image Window Keystroke Commands
Image Keys Pane
Adjusting the Image Cursor
Command Modes
Cursor Command Modes
Roam Mode
Cursor Mode
Plot
Overview
Plotting Images and Data
Creating a Plot from Table Data
Plotting Examples
Plot Bar
Plot Animation Bar
Plot Properties
Plot Series Properties
Plot Marker Properties
Image Plot Properties
Save Window Position
Chart
Chart Windows
Plotting Images and Data
Creating a Chart from Table Data
Chart Command Menu
Chart Axis Limits
Chart Properties Pane
Chart Series Properties
Chart Titles
Chart Legend Properties
Save Window Position
3-D Plot
Overview
3-D Animation Toolbar
3-D Rotation Toolbar
3-D Drawing Attributes
3-D Light Source Dialog
3-D Viewpoint Dialog
3-D Window Dialog
Save Window Position
File Open
Open Command
Opening & Saving Files
Opening Files from File Lists
Report
Overview
Grid Controls
Report Commands
Report Window Menu
Save Window Position
Grid Properties
Overview
Table Appearance Properties
Table Printing Properties
Text Editor
Overview
Creating a new text document
Text Editor Edit Menu
Text Editor View Menu
Save Window Position
Script Editor Window
Script Editor Toolbar
Script Editor Context Menu
Script Editor View Menu
Save Window Position
Plug-ins
File Opening Plug-ins
Image Processing Plug-ins
Toolbars
Working with Toolbars
Command Toolbars
Image Keys Pane
3-D Animation Toolbar
3-D Rotation Toolbar
Cursor Tools Toolbar
Image Cursor Toolbar
Image Plot Toolbar
Image Set Toolbar
Image Tools Toolbar
Image Bar
Calibration Tools Toolbar
Interactive Repair Toolbar
Main Toolbar
Measurements Toolbar
Working with FITS Format
Overview
FITS Format Definition
FITS keywords
FITS Header Editor
FITS Header Pane
FITS image orientation
List COMMENT Keywords
List HISTORY Keywords
List Statistics Keywords
List WCS keywords
MIRAPROC keyword
Editing the FITS header
Modifying keywords
Adding metadata at file open or file save
Creating an image list from keywords
Searching images for keyword values
Viewing the FITS File Header
Fixing Header Problems in Photometric Data
Image Information Editor (RGB images)
Coordinate Systems
Overview
Image Coordinate System
Pixel Coordinate Definition
Subpixel Coordinate Definition
World Coordinate System
Image Display Orientation
FITS Image Orientation
Image Coordinate Display
Coordinate Commands
Go to cursor coordinates
Go To Object
Astrometric Calibration
Set an arcsecond scale
Set an equatorial scale
Set a linear scale
Set independent linear scales
Set linear world coordinate units
Setting brightness units
Alignment Commands
High precision image registration
Align on Object
Align on Point
Align by WCS
Coordinate Readout
Set X-Axis Linear Format
Set Y-Axis Linear Format
Set Pixel Value Format
Select Image Properties
World Coordinate System
Overview
World Coordinate System Keywords
Deleting the WCS
Astrometric Calibration
Overview
Tutorial
Entering coordinate data
Changing reference point data
Calibration Preferences dialog
Plate Solution Strategy
Other preferences
Measuring Images
Overview
Measurement Panes
Image Measurements Toolbar
Image Cursor Toolbar
Image Keys Pane
Moving the image cursor to a coordinate
Setting Application Properties
Testing using synthetic images
Setting statistical estimator properties
Opening a table in Microsoft Excel
Tutorial: Working with Measurements in a Grid
Angle Measurements
Command overview
Marker properties
Aperture Photometry
Overview of aperture photometry
Apphot Pane for photometry results
Tutorial: Introduction to Aperture Photometry
Tutorial: Doing Time Series Photometry
How Magnitude and Errors are calculated
Editing target data and standard star data
Automatic detection of objects
Plotting a light curve
Kwee - van Woerden
Setting marker attributes
Preparing a report for the AAVSO
Setting the aperture size and shape
Setting photometry keywords
Fixing header problems in photometric data
Importing a photometry catalog
Calculate Julian Date
Definitions of measurements
Definitions of errors
Understanding signal to noise ratio
Aperture Photometry Toolbar
Aperture Photometry Properties
Aperture Photometry Properties dialog
Point Markers
Calibration Results
Image Information
Photometry Keywords
AAVSO Reporting
Other Properties
Measurement Output
Astrometric Calibration
Overview
Tutorial
Plate Solution Strategy
Centroid Measurements
Command overview
Centroid properties
Distance & Angle Measurements
Command overview
Measuring Distance and Angle
Example
Angle Measurement Definition
FWHM Measurements
Command overview
FWHM properties
PSF Fit Properties
Labeling Images
Overview
Label Properties
Examples
Line Measurements
Command overview
Marker properties
Plot Line Measurements
Command overview
Marker Properties
Plot Point Measurements
Plot Point Measurements
Marker Properties
Shape Properties
Point Measurements
Command overview
Marker properties
Region Measurements
Command overview
Marker properties
Region properties
Statistics Measurements
Command overview
Statistics Measurements
Statistics properties
List Statistics Keywords
Remove Statistics Keywords
Marker Properties
Overview
Drawing Properties
Centroid Properties
Region Properties
Copying & Pasting Markers
Copy Markers
Paste Markers
Scatter Plots
Scatter Plot command
Tutorial: Making a Scatter Plot of Measurements
Selecting Cells in a Grid Control
Point Sampling
Overview
Pixel Table Pane
Viewing and editing pixel values
Report Windows
Overview
Grid Controls
Grid Context Menu
Optimizing the column width
Opening a table in Excel
Table Properties
Table Printing Properties
Table Appearance Properties
Plotting Images and Data
Overview
Plot Bar Pane
Creating a Chart from Table Data
Creating a Plot from Table Data
Examples of plot types
Examples of row plots
Setting Application Properties
Horizontal Slice Plot
Vertical Slice Plot
Plot Windows
Overview
Creating a Plot from Table Data
Plot Bar
Plot Animation Bar
Plot Keys Pane
Plot Context Menu
Set X-Axis Format
Set Y-Axis Format
Plot Series Data
Plot Measurements
Go to Source Image
Plot Averaging Modes
Saving a plot as a text file
Save Window Position
Window Properties
Plot Properties
Plot Series Properties
Chart Windows
Chart Windows
Creating a Chart from Table Data
Chart Command Menu
Chart Axis Limits
Chart Properties Pane
Chart Series Properties
Chart Titles
Chart Legend Properties
Save Window Position
Working with Plot Series
Changing Plot Series Attributes
Overplotting & Animating
Go to Source Image
Copying & pasting plot series
Adding series to a line profile plot
Plot Default Marker Properties
Setting marker attributes before the plot
Default Series Properties
Plot Series Properties
Plot Series Data
Column and Row Profile Plots
Column profile plots
Making a column profile plot
Row profile plots
Making a row profile plot
Plotting an averaged line
Overview
Plot Averaging Modes
Changing the Plot Appearance
Changing Plot Attributes
The Plot Attributes dialog
Using a dialog shortcut
X Axis Properties
Y Axis Properties
Plot Labels
Frame Properties
Selecting a Coordinate System
Plot coordinate systems
Using World Coordinates
Comparison of coordinate systems
Line profile plots
Command
Creating a Line Profile plot
Adding series along different lines
Adding parallel series
Preferences
Setting Line Profile preferences
Centroid Preferences
Marker Properties
Radial profile plots
Making a radial profile plot
Radial Profile Properties
PSF Fit Properties
Histogram plots
Making a Histogram plot
Histogram Properties
Comparison of Histogram Preferences
Making a Bit Histogram plot
Plot Measurements
Overview
Plot Point Measurements
Plot Line Measurements
Statistics Measurements
Statistics Properties
Mark Statistic
Plot Marker Properties
Plot Notes Pane
Scatter plots
Scatter Plot command
Tutorial: Making a Scatter Plot of Measurements
Selecting Cells in a Grid Control
Pixel Series plots
Plotting a value through an image set
3-D plots
3-D Surface Plot command
3-D Plot Type Examples
3-D Z-Scaling Examples
Preferences
3-D Viewpoint
3-D Window Dialog
3-D Drawing Attributes
3-D Light Source
Surface Plot Z Limits
Contour plots
Contour Plot command
Contour Plot Properties
Contour Drawing Properties
Interactive Contour Plot command
Interactive Contour Properties
Contour Plot Smoothing
Copy & Paste
Example
Copying plot data to the clipboard
Pasting plots from the clipboard
Copying the window bitmap
Printing Plots
Overview
Properties
Overview
Printing Placement Properties
Printing Overlay Properties
Printing Heading Properties
Printing Text Properties
Calibrating Images
Selecting Source Images
Overview
Creating synthetic images
Trimming an image section
Adding metadata at File Open or Save
Modifying header keywords
Creating a Pixel Mask
Applying a Pixel Mask
Image Combining Strategy
Editing and Creating a Blemish Mask
Applying a Blemish Mask
File Event Scripting
Astrometric Calibration
Express Image Calibration
Express Image Calibration
Bias Correction Properties
Dark Correction Properties
Flat Correction Properties
Cosmetic Correction Properties
Creating a Master Bias
Create Master Bias
Image Combining Strategy
Creating a Master Dark
Create Master Dark
Image Combining Strategy
Create Master Flat
Create Master Flat
Flat Frame Selection Criteria
Image Combining Strategy
Create Illumination Flat
Create Illumination Flat
Flat Correction Properties
Image Combining Strategy
Create Pixel Flat
Create Pixel Flat
Flat Correction Properties
Image Combining Strategy
Repairing Artefacts and Cosmetic Defects
Overview of Methods
Cleaning artefacts from an image set
Interactively Repairing Defects
Evaluating repair techniques using synthetic images
Blemish Masks
Creating and editing a blemish mask
Applying a Blemish Mask
Pixel Masks
Creating a Pixel Mask
Editing a Pixel Mask
Applying a Pixel Mask
Removing Stars from Images
Overview
Changing the aperture properties
Viewing data for template samples
Properties
Overview
Point Properties
Other Properties
Processing Images
Overview
Command Dialogs
Selecting Source Images
Image Types
Image Region Commands
Testing calibration strategies using synthetic images
Image Keys Pane
File Event Scripting
Adding metadata at File Open or Save
Creating an image list from keywords
Searching images for keyword values
Cosmetic Repairs
Interactive Repair
Interactive Repair Properties
Removing cosmic rays from an image set
Blemish Masks
Creating and editing a blemish mask
Applying a blemish mask
Pixel Masks
Creating a pixel mask from an image
Editing a pixel mask
Applying a pixel mask
Removing Stars from Images
Overview
Changing the aperture properties
Viewing data for template samples
Properties
Overview
Markers
Background
Sample Data
Combining Images
Combine Image Set
Combine Files
Image combining methods
Setting normalization preferences
Region Statistics
Aligning Images
Overview
Aligning on a point
Aligning on an extended object
Aligning using the WCS calibration
High Precision Registration command
Overview
Tutorial: Introduction to Image Registration
Example using Point Tracking
Image Registration Properties
Image Registration Properties Dialog
Resampling
Background
Image Registration Residuals
Marker Properties
Resampling Properties
Tracking Properties
Image Region Statistics
Overview
Estimators
Editing & Copying
Overview
Duplicating to a new window
Emptying the Clipboard
Math Commands
Overview
Arithmetic Operations
Change Pixel Type
Combine Image Set
Fit Background
Image Arithmetic
Normalize Image
Region Statistics
Value Arithmetic
Using Plug-ins
Geometry Commands
Overview
Rotating Images
Rotation Menu
Affine Transformation
Expand Image
Imbed Image
Mirror
Reverse
Rotate
Rotate by angle (from Image Toolbar)
Scale
Shift
Transpose
Cropping to specified bounds
Cropping to the Image Cursor
Cropping by a rectangle
Align Horizontal
Align Vertical
Commands for RGB data
Working with RGB Images
Applying a palette to the pixels
Converting to RGB
Converting to Grayscale
Converting to 16 bit Luminance
Converting to 8 bit Luminance
Removing color noise
Extracting channels
Making an LRGB Image
Making an RGB Image
Commands for Intensity data
Extracting byte planes
Converting the data type
Converting to RGB
Undo
Using undo
Filtering Images
Overview
Removing Extreme Pixel Values
Cosmic Ray Filter
De-speckle Filter command
Clip High Values
Clip Low Values
Rank Filtering
Rank Filter
Median Filter
Minimum Filter
Maximum Filter
Smoothing Image Details
Rectangle Filter
Elliptical Filter
Binomial Filter
Gaussian Filter
Block Average Filter
Block Sum Filter
Sharpening Image Details
High Pass Filter
Unsharp Mask
Maximum Entropy command
Maximum Entropy example
Enhancing Edges
Gradient Filter
Rotational Gradient Filter
Rotational Gradient example
Laplacian Filter
Miscellaneous Kernel Filters
Custom Filter Kernel
3x3 Custom Filter command
Extracting Sources from Images
Using the MExtract Module
Definitions of Extracted Properties
Running the Pipeline
Tutorial
Preferences
Properties for the Source Extraction Tutorial
Source Extraction dialog
Procedure page
Background page
Detect page
Filter page
Match page
Difference page
Post Process page
Post Processing Options
Centroid Properties (Source Extraction)
FWHM Properties (Source Extraction)
PSF Fit Properties
Aperture Photometry Properties
Variability Properties
Image Diagnostics and Calculations
Overview
Create Synthetic Image
Bit Histogram Plot
Calculate Airmass
Calculate Gain
Calculate Image Scale
Calculate Julian Date
Calculate Readout Noise
Using the Pro Script Module
Working with scripts
Using the Script Editor Window
Using the Script Manager
Editing script keywords
Save Window Position
Related Topics
Script Editor Toolbar
Script Editor View Menu
Script Editor Context Menu
File Event Scripting
File Event Scripting
Tutorial: Introduction to File Event Scripting

Mira Pro x64 User's Guide

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Choosing Transfer Function Properties


To convert an image from pixel data to a visual representation of brightness and color, Mira uses both a transfer function and an Image Palette. The transfer function uses a mathematical prescription that slices the pixel data into 256 discrete levels which are indices into a grayscale or color palette. The detailed prescription for how the range of pixel values is sliced involves 3 parameters: Sample, Range, and Stretch. Changing any of these values changes the conversion to numeric palette indices and hence affects the value of gray or pseudocolor assigned to the visual representation of the image data. In addition to these 3 fundamental palette parameters, Mira Pro x64 added aBoost option to enhance the transfer function by increasing contrast for pixel values crowded into a narrow range of brightness (see Using the Boost Transfer Function Option). All of these parameters together define the properties of the transfer function. This topic describes how to choose the transfer function properties. For palettes, see Image Palettes, Palette Properties, and related topics.

Choosing Properties according to the Image Data

The transfer function settings that works best depends on the nature of the image or object being viewed. What may work best for one type of image or class of object may not work so well for another. However, you can get close to the optimal parameters that work broadly for a given class of image or object type, then tweak the parameters for the individual case. For example, the transfer function that works best for an image of a star field is usually not the best for viewing an image of a galaxy nebula, and neither usually works well for an image of a planet or the moon. Therefore, Mira provides many settings for adjusting the transfer function and the ability to save parameter groups as a preset using a profile. For example, you may create a certain group of settings that works well for viewing star fields and save it as the name "Star Field". Similarly, you may have a transfer function that works well for the moon, and save it as "Moon". This is facilitated by the Profile Control on the default Transfer Function Properties dialog and indirectly by clicking [Save] on the Transfer Function Pane. Note that most of the transfer function properties can also be changed on a displayed image using the Transfer Function Popup Menus instead of the Transfer Function Panes.

Guidelines for Choosing Transfer Function Properties

Mira is supplied with a number of transfer function profiles suitable for a wide range of images. You can use these as is, or use them as a starting point and modify them for your own needs. Here are some guidelines for choosing settings for displaying images of different types of subjects. The settings themselves are described in detail further below.

Star fields

Range: 95% (high contrast), 99% (lower contrast).

Stretch: Gamma.

Gamma Value: Start around 0.6. Increase or decrease gamma to change the emphasis on details near the sky level.

Consider using the Boost option to reveal faint details near the background.

Galaxies and nebulae

Range: 95% (high contrast), 99% (lower contrast).

Stretch: Gamma.

Gamma Value: Start around 0.6. Increase or decrease gamma to change the emphasis on details near the sky level.

Consider using the Boost option to reveal faint structure near the background.

Planets

Range: Min/Max.

Stretch: Gamma.

Gamma Value: Start around 1.1. Adjust to emphasize detail either near the center or edges of the planet.

Moon, surface of planets or other bodies

Range: Min/Max, 99% (moderate contrast), or95% (high contrast)

Stretch: Linear.

Gamma Value: not used.

You may experiment with using a gamma stretch, starting with gamma values near 1.0.

Image data for engineering and analysis

Range: Min/Max, 99% (moderate contrast), or95% (high contrast)

Stretch: Linear.

Gamma Value: not used.

You may experiment with using a gamma stretch, starting with gamma values near 1.0.

Consider using the Boost option to separate subtle structure in the pixel values.

Understanding the Transfer Function Settings

The collection of settings that define a transfer function are described above in general terms. Below, we cover the meaning of these adjustments in a lot more detail. The transfer function is defined by three main Properties: Sample, Range, and Stretch. Each of these is described separately below. The values of these properties may be adjusted using the Transfer Function Pane and the Transfer Function Properties dialog. Also see the topic below, Enhancing Details using the Boost option.

Sample

This property determines which portion of the image is used to calculate the transfer function. Since the transfer function is computed from the image values, this property controls which pixel values go into the calculation. Initially you may want use the Entire Image to set the scaling so that all parts of the image have a chance to vote on how visible they will be. But later you may discover that that despite what other properties you set, letting all pixels vote does not give the desired result for viewing a specific region of interest. In that case, use the Image Cursor to outline the region of interest and switch to the Cursor Region setting.

Range

This property describes how the minimum and maximum image values will be chosen to set the limit on the transfer function. Only pixels within this range will be assigned bins, or palette indices for display purposes. This means that pixels outside this range will be uniformly "black" at the bottom of the scale or uniformly "white" at the top of the scale, with no visible detail.

The range setting is a sort of contrast value based, for many of the options, upon the histogram (distribution) of pixel intensity. The closer together are the minimum and maximum values, the more rapid the change from "black" to "white" in the screen display and hence the higher the contrast appears to be.

Mira provides a number of percentile options that use the image histogram of pixels inside the Sample region to compute the range values. In the descriptions below, the terms "black" and "white" are used to describe values that are of uniform representation above or below the limits of the transfer function. If a pseudocolor palette is applied to the image, then these values may be pink and periwinkle, but the result is the same that all pixels above or below the transfer limits are of uniform color and lack all detail.

  • Autoscale: This setting lets Mira choose the minimum and maximum levels based upon its interpretation of the image histogram. When using this method, you must choose a Contrast setting to apply to Mira's choice. The lower the contrast setting, the lower will be the image contrast and vice versa.

  • Min/Max: This setting accommodates all pixels of any brightness that are found in the sampling region. This is intended to show the whole range of brightness but, for noisy images with a few excessively bright or dark pixels, the result of this setting can be very low contrast. For noisy images, you might be able to overcome this limitation of the method by choosing a sample region that excludes the deviant pixels.

  • 95%, 99%, and other percent settings: These options use pixel values only below the 95th or other percentile of the histogram. These settings therefore allow the brightest pixels to "burn out" in the displayed image. Using a higher percentile setting approaches the same result as the Min/Max setting.

  • Percentile: This setting lets you specify the histogram percentiles when none of the built-in Range percent options is quite what you need.

  • Specify Z: This setting allows you to specify the Z value, or image pixel value, at the extremes of the transfer function histogram. All pixel values below the minimum appear "black" and all those above the maximum appear "white".

  • Boost: This option can be toggled on/off to reveal detailed structure within a compressed ranges of pixel value without saturating the highlights. See the section below for a description.

Tip

All Range settings other than Specify Z adjust the range according to the unique histogram limits for the specific image. Choosing Range = Specify Z overrides the automatic determination of histogram limits by forcing a specified range.

When applying Range = Specify Z to an Image Set, you may not get the expected result for all images unless their intensity histograms are very similar.

Stretch

The Stretch parameter describes how pixel values inside the Range are assigned to different bins. By crowding together or spreading out the values assigned to each bin, you can change the contrast within different portions of the brightness range.

  • Linear: This type of stretch sets equal steps of image intensity for all bins. This means, for example, that the feature contrast at low brightness levels will be the same as the feature contrast at high brightness levels.

  • Logarithmic: This option compresses the intensity values at the dark end and spreads out the intervals at the brighter end of the image histogram. This gives a faster rate of change of bin index per intensity value at the darker end so the contrast of dark features is enhanced. The rate of change at the bright end is very low, so the feature contrast is reduced at the bright end of the histogram. This setting is a good choice for images where you want to see a lot of contrast in faint background features at the expense of details in bright features.

  • Gamma: This is a very versatile parameter that lets you shift the contrast bias to higher or lower levels or anywhere between. A Gamma value less than 1 shifts the higher contrast to lower intensity and a gamma value greater than 1 shifts the higher contrast to higher intensity. A gamma value of exactly 1.0 gives the same result as a Linear stretch.

The Boost Transfer Function Option

The Boost option enhances the transfer function by identifying compressed ranges of pixel values and stretching them over a larger grayscale range without saturating bright regions. In astronomical images, this expansion can be useful for detecting subtle features near the sky background. The Boost option is available in combination with all other transfer function properties. Benefits of the Boost option are as follows:

  • Boost works with all other transfer function parameters.

  • Boost works on intensity (non RGB) images of all pixel types, from 8-bit integer to 64-bit real.

  • Boost can be applied as a default transfer function parameter or after displaying the image.

  • Boost can be toggled on/off after an image is displayed, for example, to identify some particular weak feature without keeping the image in a boosted state.

  • The Boost algorithm is very fast.

See Using the Boost Transfer Function Option for an example about revealing faint nebulous structure in the Orion Nebula, M42.

Related Topics

Transfer Functions

Using the Boost Transfer Function Option

Transfer Function Pane

Transfer Function Properties

Transfer Function Popup Menus


Mira Pro x64 User's Guide, Copyright Ⓒ 2023 Mirametrics, Inc. All Rights Reserved.