forked from bolidozor/js9
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
Astronomical image display right in your browser
License
Ionozor/js9
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
JS9 is our Web-based implementation of DS9, the de facto standard image display for astronomy. With JS9, you can: - display FITS images and tables in a Web page - drag and drop FITS images and tables - retrieve FITS files from data archives - change the colormap and scale algorithm - blend images and apply RGB image filters - mouse move displays pixel values, WCS info - one finger displays pixel values, WCS info - mouse press/move changes the contrast/bias - two fingers changes the contrast/bias - create and manipulate regions of interest - extend JS9 using plugins and the public API - perform data analysis (local and server-side) - control JS9 from a command shell or Python - print images, save images, etc ... The JS9 Website contains on-line documentation, demos, and downloads: http://js9.si.edu Of course, JS9 also is available on GitHub: https://github.com/ericmandel/js9 For installation instructions, start with help/install.html JS9 can change how we think about image display and analysis, moving beyond the Desktop into the Web. You can simply drag and drop a FITS image from your computer onto the JS9 display. All of basic JS9/DS9 functionality is immediately available: zoom, pan, colormaps, scaling, regions, WCS, etc. You can extend JS9 using the Plugin facility in combination with the JS9 Public API. For example, you can perform browser-based analysis on the displayed image. On the JS9 Website, click the Plugins tab, create a region, and move it around ... In addition, URL-based data files support server-side analysis (using the original data files on the back-end server). Server-side analysis can be run, for example, in response to region changes, with the results displayed back in your browser. On the JS9 Website, click the Analysis tab, choose a task, create a region, and move it around ... JS9 originally was conceived as way to provide DS9 functionality on the Web, in order to support astronomical data archives, data centers, and individual projects. It subsequently has proven its value in the lab, on education Web pages, and as part of Web-based analysis tools. It has been tested on a variety of browsers (Firefox, Safari, Chrome, IE9) using a variety of operating systems (Linux, OS X, IOS, Windows). We are very interested in exploring new uses for JS9 as we evolve its functionality in response to community needs. If you would like to join the fun, please contact us at: [email protected]. Eric Mandel JS9 is distributed under the terms of The MIT License.
About
Astronomical image display right in your browser
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Packages 0
No packages published
Languages
- JavaScript 76.4%
- C 18.0%
- HTML 3.9%
- CSS 0.8%
- Shell 0.4%
- Makefile 0.3%
- Other 0.2%