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Utilities for analyzing wavefront error data

Project description

STOP-utils

PyPI version GitHub version License Documentation Status

Utilities for analyzing wavefront error data.

Overview

This package provides utilities for Wavefront Error (WFE) analysis, implementing orthonormal polynomial decomposition and visualization tools. The core functionality is based on the PAOS package (see readthedocs). The package supports both raw WFE data files and Zemax-exported Wavefront Map text files.

Installation

From PyPI

Once the package is published on PyPI, you can install it using pip:

pip install stop-utils
From GitHub

You can install the latest development version directly from GitHub:

pip install git+https://github.com/arielmission-space/STOP-utils.git
Development Installation

First, clone the repository:

git clone https://github.com/arielmission-space/STOP-utils.git
cd STOP-utils

Then, create a virtual environment and activate it:

python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate  # On Windows use `venv\Scripts\activate`

Finally, install dependencies with either make:

make install

Or poetry:

poetry install

Package Structure

stop_utils/
├── pyproject.toml
├── README.md
├── stop_utils/
│   ├── __init__.py
│   ├── cli.py              # Typer CLI implementation   ├── converters.py       # Input errormap data converters   ├── types.py            # Custom types and data classes   ├── visualization.py    # Plotting utilities   └── wfe_analysis.py     # Core analysis functionality
└── tests/
    ├── __init__.py
    ├── conftest.py
    ├── test_cli.py
    ├── test_converters.py
    ├── test_visualization.py
    └── test_wfe_analysis.py

Zemax Integration

The zemax/ submodule provides tools for interfacing with Zemax OpticStudio through its ZOS-API:

stop_utils/zemax/
├── __init__.py
├── zmx_boilerplate.py     # Core ZOS-API interface
├── wavefront_extractor.py # Wavefront map extraction
└── zmx_batch_processor.py # Batch processing utility

Key features:

  • Direct integration with Zemax OpticStudio via ZOS-API
  • Automated wavefront map extraction from Zemax files
  • Batch processing capabilities for multiple Zemax files
  • Support for custom wavelength and surface selection
  • Automated visualization of wavefront maps

Requirements:

  • Zemax OpticStudio (Premium, Professional, or Standard Edition)
  • Python.NET (pythonnet) package
  • Valid Zemax license for API use

Usage

A dedicated CLI entry point is provided for batch processing Zemax files:

stop-utils zmx-batch -b "C:\path\to\zemax\files" -o "C:\path\to\output\dir" -s "EXPP" -w 0.633

This command processes all .zmx files in the specified folder, extracting wavefront maps for the given surface and wavelength. Output files are saved in the specified output directory.

Options:

  • --base-folder, -b: Directory containing .zmx files (required)
  • --output-dir, -o: Directory to save output files (required)
  • --surface-name, -s: Surface name to process (default: EXPP)
  • --wavelength-um, -w: Custom wavelength in micrometers

Module Descriptions

types.py

Contains type definitions and data classes used throughout the package:

@dataclass
class WFEResult:
    raw: npt.NDArray[np.float64]
    coefficients: npt.NDArray[np.float64]
    zernikes: npt.NDArray[np.float64]
    residual: npt.NDArray[np.float64]
    pttf: npt.NDArray[np.float64]
    model: npt.NDArray[np.float64]

@dataclass
class AnalysisConfig:
    n_zernike: int
    save_coeffs: bool
    generate_plots: bool
    plot_format: str

Core Components

  1. wfe_analysis.py: Core functionality for WFE analysis

    • Loading and preprocessing WFE data
    • Support for raw WFE data and Zemax Wavefront Map text files
    • Elliptical mask creation and fitting
    • Orthonormal polynomial decomposition
    • Coefficient calculation and fitting
  2. visualization.py: Plotting utilities

    • WFE map visualization
    • Elliptical mask and aperture plotting
    • Residual error mapping
    • Results visualization
  3. cli.py: Command-line interface using Typer

    • Main analysis command
    • Progress tracking
    • Result output handling

Usage

Analyze a wavefront error data file:

stop-utils analyze input_file output_dir/

Supported input formats:

  • Raw WFE data files (.dat)
  • Zemax Wavefront Map exports (.txt) from the "Text" button in the Wavefront Map analysis window or from zmx-batch (see above).

Options:

  • --nzernike, -n: Number of polynomials (default: 15)
  • --plot-format, -f: Plot output format (png, pdf, svg) (default: png)
  • --save-coeffs/--no-save-coeffs: Save coefficients to JSON
  • --no-plots: Skip plot generation
  • --help, -h: Show help message
  • --version, -v: Show version information

Examples:

# Analyze a raw WFE data file
stop-utils analyze wfe.dat results/ --nzernike 21 --plot-format pdf --save-coeffs

# Analyze a Zemax Wavefront Map file
stop-utils analyze wavefront_map.txt results/ --plot-format png --format zemax

Outputs

The tool generates several outputs in the specified directory (where {format} is determined by the --plot-format option):

  • wfe_raw.{format}: Raw wavefront error data
  • wfe_pttf.{format}: Piston, tip, tilt, and focus components
  • wfe_model.{format}: Orthonormal polynomial model fit
  • wfe_residual.{format}: Residual error after model fit
  • polynomial_coefficients.{format}: Bar plot of polynomial coefficients
  • polynomial_coefficients.json: JSON file containing coefficient values

Requirements

  • Python ≥ 3.10
  • Dependencies in pyproject.toml

Development

The project includes a Makefile to streamline common development tasks:

make help         # Show available commands
make install      # Install dependencies using poetry
make test         # Run the test suite
make check        # Run type checking with mypy
make format       # Format code with black and isort
make docs         # Build the documentation
make clean        # Remove Python cache files and build artifacts

Example workflow:

  1. Set up development environment:

    make install
    
  2. Make your changes and format the code:

    make format
    
  3. Run type checking and tests:

    make check
    make test
    
  4. Clean up before committing:

    make clean
    

Building Documentation

To build the documentation locally:

  1. Install the documentation dependencies:

    poetry install --with docs
    # or using make:
    # make install-docs
    
  2. Build the HTML documentation:

    make docs
    # or manually:
    # sphinx-build -b html docs/source docs/build/html
    

The generated HTML files will be in the docs/build/html directory. Open docs/build/html/index.html in your browser to view the documentation.

Implementation Notes

  1. Data Flow:

    graph TD
       A[CLI/Input File] --> B[Load WFE Data]
       B --> C[Detect Elliptical Aperture]
       C --> D[Fit Orthonormal Polynomials]
       D --> E[Generate Results & Plots]
       E --> F[Output Directory/Logs]
    
  2. Core Functions:

    • mask_to_elliptical_aperture(): Converts mask to elliptical aperture
    • calculate_zernike(): Computes polynomials decomposition
    • fit_zernike(): Performs polynomial fitting
    • generate_plots(): Creates visualization outputs
  3. Error Handling:

    • Input validation
    • Graceful failure for invalid data
    • Clear error messages via Typer
  4. Performance Considerations:

    • Efficient numpy operations
    • Progress tracking for long operations
    • Optional plot generation

Cite as

@INPROCEEDINGS{2024SPIE13092E..4KB,
       author = {{Bocchieri}, Andrea and {Mugnai}, Lorenzo V. and {Pascale}, Enzo},
        title = "{PAOS: a fast, modern, and reliable Python package for physical optics studies}",
    booktitle = {Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2024: Optical, Infrared, and Millimeter Wave},
         year = 2024,
       editor = {{Coyle}, Laura E. and {Matsuura}, Shuji and {Perrin}, Marshall D.},
       series = {Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) Conference Series},
       volume = {13092},
        month = aug,
          eid = {130924K},
        pages = {130924K},
          doi = {10.1117/12.3018333},
       adsurl = {https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2024SPIE13092E..4KB},
      adsnote = {Provided by the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System}
}

License

This project is licensed under the BSD 3-Clause License. See the LICENSE file for details.

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