A&A 484, 591-599 (2008)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20079046
S. Criscuoli - I. Ermolli
INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, via Frascati 33, 00040 Monte Porzio Catone, Italy
Received 9 November 2007 / Accepted 21 February 2008
Abstract
Aims. We investigate whether restoration techniques, such as those developed for application to current observations, can be used to remove stray-light degradation effects on archive CaII K full-disk observations. We analyze to what extent these techniques can recover homogeneous time series of data.
Methods. We develop a restoration algorithm based on a method presented by Walton & Preminger (1999, ApJ, 514, 959). We apply this algorithm to data for both present-day and archive CaII K full-disk observations, which were acquired using the PSPT mounted at the Rome Observatory, or obtained by digitization of Mt Wilson photographic-archive spectroheliograms.
Results. We show that the restoring algorithm improves both spatial resolution and photometric contrast of the analyzed solar observations. We find that the improvement in spatial resolution is similar for analyzed recent and archive data. On the other hand, the improvement of photometric contrast is quite poor for the archive data, with respect to the one obtained for the present-day images. We show that the quality of restored archive data depends on the photographic calibration applied to the original observations. In particular, photometry can be recovered with a restoring algorithm if the photographic-calibration preserves the intensity information stored in the original data, principally outside the solar-disk observations.
Key words: Sun: activity - Sun: chromosphere - Sun: faculae, plages - techniques: images processing
Long time series of synoptic full-disk CaII K observations are applied in many fields of solar research, in particular all investigations concerning solar activity and variability over long-term timescales (Solanki 2007). Among existing series, some include archive observations that were recorded over many decades. These series, in addition to those using present-day observations, are composed of data affected differently by degradations due to instrumental optics and turbulent motions in the Earth's atmosphere. The removal of these degradations enables higher-quality analyses and measurements of data stored in the series.
The literature concerning the estimation and correction of instrumental and atmospheric degradations of full-disk solar images is extensive (e.g. Brahde 1972; Lawrence et al. 1985; Albregtsen & Maltby 1981; Hansen 1973; Martínez Pillet 1992; Barducci et al. 1972). Toner & Jefferies (1993) and Toner et al. (1997) proposed a technique based on the estimate of the zero crossing of the Hankel transform for observed images. Starting from these works, Walton & Preminger (1999) presented a technique (WP, hereafter) based on the estimate of the Point Spread Function (PSF, hereafter) using the analysis of the Hankel transform of the images. This technique was demonstrated to work on both synthetic and real solar observations. The authors recovered image photometry to an accuracy of less than a few tenths of a percent for CaII K observations taken at the San Fernando Observatory, and an increase in image homogeneity for the data set they analyzed. Mathew et al. (2007) reported similar results when they applied a modified version of the WP technique to remove instrumental contamination from analyzed time-series data of space-based SoHO/MDI full-disk continuum observations.
In this study we analyze whether, and to what extent, a restoring algorithm based on the WP technique can be used to remove instrumental and atmospheric degradations in archive CaII K observations. It is known that archive observations are affected by degradations which are caused by stray-light effects, that are stronger than those characteristic of present-day data (Ermolli et al. 2007b). With this aim, we developed a restoring algorithm that we applied to two different types of data. The first type of data are present-day observations acquired using the PSPT telescope located at the Rome Observatory. The second type of data that we analyzed included observations derived using digitization of the Mt Wilson solar photographic archive. At present, these data are the only archive CaII K observations freely available in digital format after pre-processing, which includes the photographic-calibration of the original observations. The data used in this study are presented in Sect. 2. The brief description of the restoring algorithm that we applied, in addition to an account of its implementation, are provided in Sect. 3. We present the results obtained by examining the analyzed images in Sect. 4. We then discuss our results in Sect. 5 and our conclusions in Sect. 6.
PSPT data set (PSPT, hereafter) - This data set is made up of current observations acquired using the PSPT telescope at the Rome Observatory (Coulter & Kuhn 1994; Ermolli et al. 2003). These data were obtained by a 2048 2048 12 bit pixel CCD camera, 2 binned, with a final pixel scale of 2 arcsec, using an interference filter centered on the CaII K line (393.3 nm, FWHM 0.25 nm). We analyzed 170 images obtained on different observing days during the months of July to September from 2000 to 2005. The analyzed data are composed of single-frame images acquired using short-exposure times (<50 ms) and are available from the Rome-PSPT archive.
Single-Day PSPT data set (SD-PSPT, hereafter) - We analyzed PSPT images acquired at different times during a single observing day, namely June 12, 2003. In particular, we analyzed a set of 23 images acquired from 6:01 to 7:08 UT every three minutes, and two sets of 14 images each, acquired every 15 minutes, from 7:29 to 10:44UT, and from 13:15 to 16:36 UT, respectively. Because of seeing variability during the observing day and the small evolution in the analyzed solar features during the same period, the analysis of these images tested the algorithm's capability to restore images to a common standard.
Mt Wilson-CAL1 data set (MW, hereafter) - This data set includes 290 images obtained by the digitization of the archive CaII K full-disk spectroheliograms, centered on the CaII K line (393.3 nm with 0.02 nm spectral resolution), taken at the Mt Wilson Observatory (Ulrich et al. 2004; Lefebvre et al. 2005) during years 1961, 1967 and 1975. These data are photographically calibrated FITS files, which are available from the UCLA archive. Details about the calibration procedure applied to the original observations can be found on the UCLA web-page. The MW images are pixels, 16-bit gray-scale files, and the pixel scale is 2.7 arcsec/pixel. The file headers of these images contain information provided by the UCLA project scientists about the original plate and its digitization, in addition to measurements of the solar-disk position and shape, namely center position, horizontal, and vertical radii.
Mt Wilson-CAL2 data set (test-MW, hereafter) - We analyzed 50 photographically un-calibrated Mt Wilson observations acquired during the years 1967 and 1975, which correspond to 50 MW images. We calibrated these images by applying a method presented in the literature (Mickaelian et al. 2007). In brief, we converted the pixel values of the un-calibrated images into relative intensity values according to the formula: I=(V-B)/(T-B), where I is the intensity (in arbitrary units), V is the average of pixel Data Number (DN, hereafter) values for the un-exposed part of the plate, B is the average of DN values for the darkest pixels, and T is the DN value for a given pixel. The criteria applied for the identification of both darkest and un-exposed pixels are the following. The first ones are all the image pixels with intensity equal to or lower than the minimum DN value of solar-disk pixels, while the pixels of the un-exposed part of the plate are the ones outside the solar-disk with intensity higher than the maximum DN value of solar-disk pixels. The data obtained by this formula are pixels, 16-bit gray-scale images, and have pixel scale 2.7 arcsec/pixel, as for the MW data set analyzed.
Figure 1 shows the profiles of the median intensity values computed on constant area annuli that are centered in the solar-disk center
in MW, test-MW, and PSPT images. We note the difference in the median intensity values for the solar limb and outside the solar-disk
between test-MW and PSPT and MW images. This is caused not only by the different level of stray-light, but also by the photographic-calibration
procedure applied to the original Mt Wilson observations.
Figure 1: Profiles of the median intensity values computed inside constant area annuli centered on the solar-disk center in MW (solid line), test-MW (dotted line), and PSPT (dashed line) images. Distance from the disk center is given in disk radius units. Intensities are normalized to the value extrapolated at disk center from 0.3 solar radii. These profiles are computed from images storing observations taken on December 29, 1975 for MW and test-MW data sets, and on August 31, 2005 for the PSPT sample. | |
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The restoring algorithm that we developed is based on a technique presented by Walton & Preminger (1999). In brief, the intensity Center-to-Limb Variation of the quiet Sun (CLVq hereafter) and the PSF are modelled using analytical functions (namely Legendre polynomials for the CLVq, and a sum of three Gaussians and a Lorentzian for the PSF), which depend on free parameters. These parameters were estimated for each image by fitting the measured CLVq to the convolution between the analytical model functions. From the retrieved PSF an optimal Wiener filter (Brault & White 1971) was computed, with which images were finally restored. A complete description of the technique is found in the original paper by Walton & Preminger (1999). Here we discuss some important aspects of its implementation.
The WP technique is based on the assumption that both atmospheric and instrumental distortions are uniform and radially symmetric over the focal plane. For what concerns the first kind of aberrations, this assumption is valid for all data sets because the integration time was longer than the typical atmospheric correlation time of 10-20 ms. Walton & Preminger (1999) provide a deeper discussion of these assumptions for when atmospheric degradation is not space-invariant. Concerning instrumental degradations, we evaluated that the eccentricity of the solar-disk on PSPT and SD-PSPT images is sub-pixel. Radial symmetry is therefore a reasonable approximation for such data. In both MW and test-MW images, the eccentricity is approximately three times larger than for PSPT images. The radial symmetry is recovered by resizing the images by an amount proportional to the difference between the values of the ``horizontal'' and ``vertical'' radii provided in the image header. Compared to present-day observations, MW and test-MW images were more strongly affected by asymmetric artifacts, which were produced during observations and storage, for example large-scale inhomogeneity affecting solar-disk observations and small-scale emulsion scratches. The effects of such inhomogeneity on the quality of the restoring achieved for the analyzed data, is discussed in Sect. 4.
In agreement with results presented by Walton & Preminger (1999, see their Fig. 1#, we found that the convolution of the chosen model functions reproduced the observed solar profile in both PSPT and MW images. The typical value of the chi-square statistic was approximately 10-4 for both data sets. The functions that describe the CLVq and the PSF were not however orthogonal; moreover the best-fit merit function had several minima and the values of the coefficients were dependent on the initial guess values (see next section). To investigate these issues we applied the developed algorithm to synthetic images of the Sun convolved by various PSFs. We found that the fitting produces large variations in the coefficient values that describe the CLVq, in some cases even when the coefficients of the CLVq were initialized to the values used in the simulation. This was because the terms of the Hessian which correspond to the coefficients of the PSF were smaller than the terms corresponding to the coefficients of the CLVq. We found in addition that the effect increased as the aberration increased. This may cause a poor estimation of the aberrations and a poor restoration of the images. In order to reduce this effect, we carefully estimated the first guesses of coefficient values. The coefficients that describe the CLVq for PSPT images were initialized using values obtained by fitting intensity profiles for good quality images acquired at minimum activity level to the model CLVq function. This preliminary fit was repeated for each MW image, because the large spread in intensity profiles did not allow a single set of coefficients to be assumed for all of the data analyzed. The set of coefficients that describes the PSF was initialized using values obtained by performing the fit on profiles evaluated for images that were randomly selected from all data sets. The radius of the solar-disk image was also a free parameter of the fit. To estimate a first guess, we applied a method based on the application of an edge-enhancement operator to solar images: the edge-enhancement operator was applied using an intensity threshold, the solar-activity features were removed, and the mean of the maximum diameters in the horizontal and vertical directions were computed. We note that the use of values derived using such a method, enables a best-fit function to be found more efficiently, compared to the use of values of radii provided in MW and test-MW image headers, which usually over-estimate our radius measurements.
The algorithm we developed differs from the technique described by Walton & Preminger (1999) in the following aspects:
We visually inspected the restored images and found that some were affected by artifacts, that is medium and high spatial frequency features which were not present in the original images, were apparent. These images were discarded and in subsequent analyses only 100, 75, and 55 frames from the SD-PSPT, PSPT, and MW data sets, respectively, were retained. The presence of artifacts in restored images was due to the failure of the minimization algorithm to find a good set of parameters to describe the PSF, which in turn, as explained above, led to the poor initialization of the parameter values. Not surprisingly the largest number of retained frames was from the SD-PSPT, which is the most homogeneous of the analyzed data sets in terms of image content and the observing conditions. For the PSPT data set, it is possible to derive restored images without artifacts by initializing the free parameters of the PSF with different values. For MW images, this was not always possible because the convergence of the solution without artifacts was hampered by the presence of defects in the original images, such as straight lines, scratches, double images and large-scale gradients.
A visual inspection of the original and restored images showed that the application of the restoring algorithm yielded an improvement in both spatial resolution and contrast of solar features identified in the analyzed images. In particular, restored images showed fine details in both quiet and active regions. These details resembled ones observed in PSPT images taken at the Mauna Loa Solar Observatory in the best seeing conditions. To evaluate the image-quality improvements and test the capability of the technique to recover homogeneity in the analyzed data sets, we performed several measurements. The results obtained are presented below. We note that, due to the different instrumentation, spectral range, observations storage and data reduction, a comparison of absolute values of measurements derived using images from the present day and archive data sets considered in this work is impossibile. For this reason we now compare the relative variations in the quantities measured using original and restored images for the three data sets.
Figure 2: Evolution during the day of image spatial scale, estimated as described in the text, for original (dashed line, asterisks) and restored (solid line, diamonds) SD-PSPT images. | |
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We first analyzed the smallest spatial scale measured in each image. This was achieved by analyzing the power spectra of small sub-arrays ( pixels) extracted at the disk center of each image. In particular, we assumed that the characteristic spatial-scale of each image, was the spatial frequency at which the integral of the power spectrum, over frequencies, is 98% of its total value. Figure 2 shows the temporal variation of the measured spatial scale for original and restored images of the SD-PSPT sample. Restored images have better resolution, which in some cases approaches the Nyquist frequency (3.8 arcsec). Moreover, less scatter between the measured values was found in the restored data set with respect to the original one. In particular, the increase with time in the characteristic spatial scale of the original images, which reflects the deterioration of observing conditions during the observational day, was less evident for restored images. This shows that the algorithm works well for images of different quality. Our most superior results, however, were derived for images that had the highest spatial resolution. The mean spatial scale measured for the first set of 23 images, which were acquired in the early morning, was and arcsec for the original and restored data, respectively. On the other hand, the corresponding mean values for the 14 images of the last data set, which were acquired during the central hours of the day, were and arcsec, respectively. Exceptions did however exist, such as images 29 and 50, for which we measured the same spatial scale on original images, but different values for the restored data. We note that the mean resolution for the entire data set varies from to arcsec, which corresponds to an increase of 7 in the resolution, and a decrease in the data dispersion of approximately 33.
Figure 3: Relative differences, in logarithmic scale, of the values of the coefficients estimated on images 29 and 50 of SD-PSPT sample with respect the coefficients estimated for image 1 of the same sample. The set {} refers to the coefficients which describe the PSF, the set {} refers to the coefficients which describe the CLVq. R is the value of the solar-disk radius. | |
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An inspection of the coefficients estimated by the minimization algorithm revealed that, for most images acquired in worse seeing conditions, the fitting produced large variations in the values of the coefficients that describe the CLVq. Figure 3 shows for example the relative variations of the coefficient values estimated for images 29 and 50, with respect to the values estimated for image 1 of the same data set. This latter image is one of the highest quality images obtained during that observing day. The plot shows that for both images 29 and 50 the largest variations are measured for the coefficients that describe the PSF, as expected. For image 50, large variations are measured also for the coefficients that describe the CLVq. This is due to the (already-mentioned) non-orthogonality of the PSF and CLVq functions and to the dependence of the fit on the initial conditions, which produces the remaining scatter of results measured in the restored data. For each image analyzed, we note that variations in the coefficient values that describe the PSF, are larger than those measured for coefficients that describe the CLVq; this indicates that the fit provides a reasonable approximation to the functions. We note also that the variations in the values of each parameter are not directly related to the goodness of the restoration, which, in turn, depends on the goodness of the estimation of the ``shapes'' of the PSF and the CLVq functions.
Figure 4 shows the cumulative histograms of the measured image resolution for original and restored images of the PSPT and MW data sets that we analyzed. These plots clearly show that restoration improves the image resolution and homogeneity of both analyzed data sets. In particular, the mean value of the measured spatial scale decreases from to arcsec and from to arcsec, for original and restored data of the PSPT and MW data sets, respectively; we note that this corresponds to an increase in resolution of approximately on both data sets. The remaining scatter of the results measured after restoration, must be partially attributed to the non-orthogonality of the fitting functions, in a similar way to the SD-PSPT data set. The seasonal variation of the image scale and the variation of the image contents, in terms of solar-activity features occurring over the solar-disk, also contribute to the dispersion of the results.
Figure 4: Cumulative histograms of image spatial scale measured on restored (solid line) and original (dashed line) images. | |
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Sunspot regions - Sunspot regions were identified in the analyzed images by applying an intensity-threshold criterion. We note that the application of this straightforward criterion for feature identification is functional to our study, which takes into account only minimum contrast values measured for large-size identified features; we provide details of our procedure below. Figure 5 shows the temporal variation of the minimum contrast measured for the largest sunspot identified on original and restored SD-PSPT images. The umbral area measured for the sunspot considered here, which belongs to AR10380 (shown in the online material), is approximately 70 micro-hemispheres. The plot shows a large dispersion in measured minimum contrast values for the original images. The maximum dispersion was measured for images acquired during the hottest hours of the day (9:29 a.m.-12:44 a.m. in local time units). The minimum contrast measured for restored images, however, has decreased by approximately , and shows both less scatter and almost no trend during the whole observing day.
Figure 5: Evolution during the day of the minimum contrast of the largest sunspot (AR10380) measured on original (asterisks) and restored (diamonds) SD-PSPT images. The restoration decreases the contrast of approximately 30% and reduces variations due to seeing variability. | |
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Figure 6: Center-to-limb variation of the minimum contrast of sunspots measured on original (asterisks) and restored (diamonds) images from PSPT ( top) and MW ( bottom) data sets. | |
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We analyzed the minimum contrast of sunspot regions identified in sub-samples of 76 PSPT and 61 MW images. To reduce the potential dispersion in results associated with the dependence of measured contrast values on sunspot size (Mathew et al. 2007; Walton & Preminger 1999), we restricted our analysis to identified features whose umbral area was larger than 30 micro-hemispheres. We selected 233 and 57 on PSPT and MW images, respectively. We note that, due to the variation in the image contrast, the number of selected features is larger after restoration (41 and 29 on PSPT and MW images, respectively), but for these analyses we retained only the features selected in both restored and original images.
In Fig. 6 we plot the minimum contrast measured in the identified features against their position in the disk (in cosine of the heliocentric angle units). We show the value of the peak and the full-width-half-maximum (error bars) of the distribution of contrast values inside 0.1 wide position bins. We note that in the PSPT restored images the measured contrast of sunspots has decreased by approximately 60 and the dependence on the position in the solar disk has reduced significantly with respect to the contrast measured in the original data. Moreover, the uncertainties described by these error bars are smaller with respect to those derived for the original data, which provides additional confirmation that restoration improves the uniformity of the data sets. In contrast, restoration does not reduce the dispersion of the measurements and the dependence on position within the solar-disk of the contrast measured in MW images. However, a small decrease in contrast values () is measured. We note that the high (absolute) values of contrast measured in the restored PSPT images (100%) are due primarly to the fact that the sunspots analyzed here were observed in the CaII K spectral range. However, to estimate whether the obtained values stem from over-restoration of images, we applied the algorithm to a data set that was acquired simultaneously with the SD-PSPT data images for the red continuum spectral range (607.2 nm, FWHM=0.5 nm). We measured sunspot-contrast values for restored images to agree with those presented by Mathew et al. (2007). By analyzing simulated images of the Sun, which we describe in more detail below, we estimated that contrast of sunspots of the size discussed is likely to be overestimated for low levels of stray-light. These findings agree with results presented by Walton & Preminger (1999).
Finally, we investigated the contrast of sunspot features identified in PSPT images with umbral area values smaller than 30 micro-hemispheres. We found that the average value of the measured minimum contrast decreases with restoring from -0.4 to -0.8. Moreover, the error bars associated with measurements performed on restored data were approximately twice as large as those derived for the original data, and a small trend with position on the solar-disk was not removed by restoration. We comment on these results in Sect. 5.
Facular regions - Facular regions were identified in SD-PSPT images and in PSPT and MW images used to study the contrast in sunspots. The identification method applied was Ktr, which was described by Ermolli et al. (2007a). We found that the number of features identified in restored images was remarkably larger than those found in the original data, the increase being approximately 500, 300, and 35 for the SD-PSPT, PSPT, and MW data sets, respectively. The maximum contrast measured inside facular regions also increased for the three data sets of 33, 18, and 7, respectively. We note that the maximum contrast measured inside facular regions depends on the spectral characteristics of the analyzed images. In particular, the wider is the spectral range of the analyzed observations the lower is the contrast.
Since the AR1038 extended region observed in the SD-PSPT sample developed several flares during the observing day, we could not study the temporal variations of facular regions identified in restored and original images of that data set, as we did for sunspots. However, we studied the effects of the restoring algorithm on the contrast of bright solar features by analyzing simulated images of the Sun. We extracted a sub-array of pixels centered on the active region AR1038 from an image of the SD-PSPT acquired before the start of flaring activity. This sub-array was superimposed on a simulated image of the Sun computed using a polynomial expansion of . The values of the coefficients were similar to those assumed to initialize the fit in PSPT images (see Sect. 3). The derived image was convolved by twelve different PSFs corresponding to increasing levels of stray-light, which was defined to be the ratio of the intensity value measured at 1.2 solar-disk radii and the intensity value measured at the disk center. Figure 7 shows the maximum contrast value measured inside the analyzed facular region for both restored and original images against the level of stray-light on images. The plot illustrates that image restoration enables the facular contrast, at the level of a few percent, to be recovered, and the measurement scatter introduced by aberrations to be reduced by approximately one tenth. As for sunspots, a slight over-restoration (less than 1) is observed for the lowest levels of stray-light degradation investigated in this study.
Figure 7: Facular maximum contrast measured on simulated images versus the level of stray-light (see text). Continuous line: original simulated image. Asterisks: aberrated images. Diamonds: restored images. | |
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Figure 8: Center-to-limb variation of maximum contrast of facular regions measured on original (asterisks) and restored (diamonds) images from PSPT ( top) and MW ( bottom) data sets. | |
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Figure 8 shows the dependence on position inside the solar-disk of the maximum contrast measured for faculae identified in the PSPT and MW data sets. Results are presented in a similar way to Fig. 6. Besides the already-mentioned increase of contrast, we note that the small trend with position inside the solar-disk is not removed by image restoration in the analyzed data sets, but appears to be slightly enhanced. Moreover, the standard deviations inside each bin are increased by image restoration, on average, by a factor of 2, which indicates a wider spread in the results. This appears to be in contrast to the results obtained for large-size sunspots identified in the PSPT data set, for which the spread results was reduced remarkably by restoration, and agrees with our results for small sunspots. We comment on these results in the next section.
Our results presented above indicate that restoring improves both spatial resolution and photometric contrast of the images from the PSPT, SD-PSPT, and MW data sets.
The increase of the spatial scale on MW data set is comparable to that derived for PSPT images (approximately 13 in both cases). The analyses of photometric properties of solar features revealed that the increase of the photometry for MW images is quite poor with respect to that derived for PSPT data. The (absolute) increase of contrast of sunspots and facular regions measured in PSPT images is in fact 60 and 18 respectively, while the same quantities measured in MW images are only 6 and 7. This difference is due to the inefficacy/ineffectiveness of the restoration; this is caused by the lack of information on the intensity pattern outside the solar disk image, which is produced by the photographic calibration applied to the MW images. As a consequence, measurement of the PSF is affected and the stray-light degradation cannot be compensated for in an accurate way. To investigate this issue, we applied the restoring algorithm to test-MW images and selected 17 and 19 sunspots on original and restored data, respectively. The variation with position on the solar-disk of the minimum contrast of these features is shown in Fig. 9. The number of selected sunspots is much smaller than for the PSPT and MW images. Sunspots were not selected according to their size; the spread of results was larger, and no clear trend with disk position was observed. Nevertheless, a comparison with results presented in Fig. 6 shows that the compensation for stray-light degradation is larger for test-MW than MW images. In particular, we measured a decrease in contrast of approximately for all sunspots, and approximately for sunspots with an umbral area larger than 30 micro-hemispheres. Although smaller, these values are comparable to those measured for the PSPT data set. This difference can be partially ascribed to the fact that for high level of stray-light, which is true for both test-MW and PSPT images, the minimization domain (which, in analyzed images, usually extends up to approximately 1.5 solar radii) is not large enough. We performed some simulations and found that the reduction of the minimization domain produces underestimation of the stray-light and that the effect is larger the larger is the stray-light contamination.
Figure 9: Minimum contrast of sunspots identified on original (asterisks) and restored (diamonds) test-MW images. | |
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The analysis of the spread in the measurements allowed the increase of data set homogeneity by restoration to be studied. In the case of the spatial resolution, we measured a decrease in the spread of 33, 14, and 20, for the SD-PSPT, PSPT, and MW images, respectively. We note that the highest decrease in spread is measured for the data sets with the most homogeneous image content (SD-PSPT), which suggests that the remaining spread measured for the other two data sets is due mainly to variation in the image content discussed in Sect. 4. In the case of the photometry, measured using the contrast of solar features, the results are more controversial. We measured a decrease in the spread of large-size sunspot contrast for SD-PSPT and PSPT data sets. On the other hand, the spread increased in the contrast between the smallest sunspots and between faculae identified in the PSPT and MW data sets. The increase of spread of facular contrast is due most likely to the enhancement, by restoration, of the dependence of their photometric properties to physical characteristics as size, filling factor, presence of bright points and time evolution. This is confirmed by the results obtained by analyzing simulated images of the Sun. Regarding sunspots, Mathew et al. (2007) showed that the contrast depends on the size only at the smallest areas. As for faculae, the restoring therefore appears to enhance the contrast size-dependence of small sunspots, but reduce the seeing-induced contrast fluctuations of large-size spots. We are unable to discard the possibility, however, that these enhancements in the contrast spread are generated directly by the restoration method. In fact, Walton & Preminger (1999) showed, by the analysis of simulated solar images, that the measurement of sunspots contrast is dependent on both their size and position on the solar-disk. They showed that the highest quality results are obtained for the largest sunspots (area larger than 100 micro-hemispheres), which occur at the solar-disk center. Similarly, Martínez Pillet (1992) noticed that potential errors in the assignment of several parameters used to describe the PSF function play different roles at small and large spatial scales. In particular, the degree of stray-light removal on small-scale features is probably affected by inaccuracies in the parameters of both the Gaussians and the Lorentzian functions of the PSF, while only those concerning the Lorentzian part play a role in the quality of the results obtained on large-size features. The removal of stray-light effects on contrast measurements of small-size features depends on more parameters than those acting on contrast measurements of large-size features and is therefore more uncertain. An interesting contribution to this topic was provided by Toner et al. (1997). We note that the uncertainty in the stray-light removal of small-scale features can explain some of the dispersion in the contrast-area relation reported by Mathew et al. (2007) for the smallest sunspots that they analyzed.
Our study indicates that the reduction techniques applied to archive observations have to preserve the largest intensity information stored in the original data, even outside the solar-disk image. This allows further improvement of the photometric quality and homogeneity of these observations, by obtaining quantitative results that are comparable to those produced using current observations. Finally, this study confirms, in agreement with Walton & Preminger (1999), that numerical simulations developed to analyze the recovery of contrast by restoration as a function of feature size and for different PSFs, are required to provide reliable interpretation of photometric measurements derived from restored full-disk images.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank S. Solanki and R. Ulrich for useful discussions. J. A. Bonet and D. Del Moro are acknowledged for reading the paper and giving their comments, and the anonymous referee for the helpful review of the manuscript. The digitization of the Mt Wilson Photographic Archive has been supported by the US National Science Foundation grant ATM/ST 0236682. This work was supported by the CVS project of Regione Lazio.
Figure A.1: Example of original ( left) and restored ( right) images for the PSPT ( top) and the MW ( bottom) data sets analyzed in this study. The images concern the solar observations taken on July 6, 2000 and on May 29, 1967 at the two sites, respectively. | |
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Figure A.2: Details of the analyzed sunspot region AR1038 on an original ( top) and restored ( bottom) SD-PSPT image. Notice the finer solar features observed in the restored image. Details are given in Sect. 4. | |
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