PRELIMINARY TESTS OF ACTIVE DEBLENDING ====================================== K. A. Marsh IPAC kam@ipac.caltech.edu May 26, 2000 Active deblending has now been implemented in the development version of PROPHOT, and this memo describes some tests designed primarily to assess the impact on run time. Before presenting the results, however, here is a brief description of the deblending procedure: An important ingredient in active deblending in PROPHOT is a scheme for arriving at a set of initial guesses for the component positions; if these initial positions are too far off, then the minimization algorithm will start off in the wrong valley and consequently diverge. The adopted scheme is one suggested by D. Elliot (JPL), whereby when a new source is added to a blend, a chi squared minimization is performed by varying the position of the new source on a predefined grid, keeping the positions of the previous components fixed. A full maximum likelihood solution is then performed. This scheme is implemented in PROPHOT as follows: For each candidate source, PROPHOT attempts a single-point-source fit. If the fit is successful (as determined by the criterion RCHISQ < CHIP, where RCHISQ is the reduced chi squared and CHIP is normally set at 3.0), the results are entered in the output file. Otherwise, an N=2 solution is attempted, where N represents an assumed number of unresolved components in the blend. In order for the N=2 solution to be regarded as successful, it must not only meet the RCHISQ < CHIP criterion, but must also have resulted in a predefined minimum improvement (denoted DCHI) in the reduced chi squared. If the N=2 solution is unsuccessful, the algorithm may continue to higher values of N, limited by the predefined limit NMAX. The complete list of input parameters which have a bearing on the decision whether or not to deblend is as follows: NMAX = maximum number of components in an unresolved blend NPCMAX = maximum number of passively-deblended components to allow and still add further components via active blending MAGMAX = maximum magnitude of the unresolved blend DCHI = minimum improvement in the reduced chi squared in order to regard the active deblending as successful CHIP = maximum acceptable value for the reduced chi squared SXBLND = maximum acceptable value of the seeing shape parameter The preliminary tests were performed on 990928n/j084, a relatively high-density scan through the Galactic plane, for which PROPHOT finds a total of 37228 sources when no active deblending is performed (i.e., NMAX=1). For the purpose of these tests, the following parameters were held constant: NPCMAX = 3 CHIP = 3.0 DCHI = 1.0 SXBLND = 1.5 The other parameters were varied, as specified in the table below. The tabulated results consist of the following quantities: Attempted deblends (%) = the pecentage of candidate sources for which an active deblend was attempted Acceptance rate (%) = the percentage of attempted deblends which resulted in an apparently satisfactory solution, as define above RCHISQ (mean) = mean reduced chi squared of the apparently successful solutions Run time = PROPHOT run time for the whole scan, The results were as follows: NMAX MAGMAX Attempted Acceptance RCHISQ Run time deblends(%) rate(%) (mean) [mm:ss] 1 15:20 2 12 0.7 46 1.5 15:46 3 12 0.7 51 1.6 15:22 4 12 0.7 55 1.5 15:31 2 13 1.6 53 1.6 15:35 3 13 1.6 59 1.6 16:20 4 13 1.6 63 1.5 18:18 2 14 3.2 58 1.6 16:36 3 14 3.2 64 1.6 16:40 4 14 3.2 67 1.6 16:14 2 no limit 8.8 53 1.6 19:54 3 no limit 8.8 57 1.6 18:17 4 no limit 8.8 59 1.6 19:37 The run times in this table are somewhat erratic since they were subject to perturbation by other jobs running on the machine at the same time, i.e. this was not a carefully controlled experiment. However, conclusions which can be drawn are: (1) For a scan of this density, active deblending of 3 and 4 (and possibly more) components is not precluded by run-time considerations. Future experiments with synthetic data (and real data with a truth table derived from higher-resolution observations) will, however, shed some light on how many components can usefully be fit given the PSF errors. (2) The estimated factor by which the run time is increased for an N=2 deblend with respect to a single-source fit is 4. The fact that it is significantly lower than the value 8 predicted in a previous memo is probably due to the fact that the minimization involved in the maximum likelihood procedure will require less iterations if the correct number of components is assumed a priori; this was not taken into account in deriving the predicted run times.