[Top] [Prev] [Next] [Bottom]

2.1 Historical Perspective

In the early 1980's, when GEIS was selected as the standard format for HST data files, it held several advantages over both FITS and the original IRAF format (OIF):

Since the selection of GEIS as HST's standard data format, FITS has added features that have dramatically increased its flexibility. In particular, FITS files can now contain multiple image extensions, each with its own header, size, and datatype, that allow multiple exposures to be packaged into the same file, along with associated error and data quality information. The FITS image kernel in IRAF version 2.11, released in August 1997, enables users to access FITS image extensions in ways similar to how they would access GEIS data groups.

Because of these advantages, FITS was chosen as the standard reduction and analysis format for STIS and NICMOS. The STSDAS tasks written for these instruments expect FITS files as input and produce FITS files as output. You cannot convert STIS and NICMOS files to GEIS format. Observers using these instruments should therefore read the following section, which explains how to work with these new FITS files.



[Top] [Prev] [Next] [Bottom]

stevens@stsci.edu
Copyright © 1997, Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy. All rights reserved. Last updated: 07/01/98 08:36:06