123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335 |
- .TH SCAT 7
- .SH NAME
- scat \- sky catalogue and Digitized Sky Survey
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B scat
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .I Scat
- looks up items in catalogues of objects
- outside the solar system
- and implements database-like manipulations
- on sets of such objects.
- It also provides an interface to
- .IR astro (7)
- to plot the locations of solar system objects.
- Finally, it displays images from the
- Space Telescope Science Institute's
- Digitized Sky Survey, keyed to the catalogues.
- .PP
- Items are read, one per line, from the standard input
- and looked up in the catalogs.
- Input is case-insensitive.
- The result of the lookup becomes the set of objects available
- to the database commands.
- After each lookup or command, if more than two objects are
- in the set,
- .I scat
- prints how many objects are in the set; otherwise it
- prints the objects'
- descriptions or cross-index listings (suitable for input to
- .IR scat ).
- An item is in one of the following formats:
- .TP
- .B ngc1234
- Number 1234 in the New General Catalogue of
- Nonstellar Objects, NGC2000.0.
- The output identifies the type
- .RB( Gx =galaxy,
- .BR Pl =planetary
- nebula,
- .BR OC =open
- cluster,
- .BR Gb =globular
- cluster,
- .BR Nb =bright
- nebula,
- .BR C+N =cluster
- associated with nebulosity,
- .BR Ast =asterism,
- .BR Kt =knot
- or nebulous region in a galaxy,
- .BR *** =triple
- star,
- .BR D* =double
- star,
- .BR ? =uncertain,
- .BR - =nonexistent,
- .BR PD =plate
- defect, and
- (blank)=unverified or unknown),
- its position in 2000.0 coordinates,
- its size in minutes of arc, a brief description, and popular names.
- .TP
- .B ic1234
- Like NGC references, but from the Index Catalog.
- .TP
- .B sao12345
- Number 12345 in the Smithsonian Astrophysical Star Catalogue.
- Output identifies the visual and photographic magnitudes,
- 2000.0 coordinates, proper motion, spectral type, multiplicity and variability
- class, and HD number.
- .TP
- .B m4
- Catalog number 4 in Messier's catalog.
- The output is the NGC number.
- .TP
- .B abell1701
- Catalog number 1701 in the Abell and Zwicky
- catalog of clusters of galaxies.
- Output identifies the magnitude of the tenth brightest member of the cluster,
- radius of the cluster in degrees, its distance in megaparsecs,
- 2000.0 coordinates, galactic latitude and longitude,
- magnitude range of the cluster (the `distance group'),
- number of members (the `richness group'), population
- per square degree, and popular names.
- .TP
- .B planetarynebula
- The set of NGC objects of the specified type.
- The type may be a compact NGC code or a full name, as above, with no blank.
- .TP
- \fL"α umi"\fP
- Names are provided in double quotes.
- Known names are the Greek
- letter designations, proper names such as Betelgeuse, bright variable stars,
- and some proper names of stars, NGC objects, and Abell clusters.
- Greek letters may be spelled out, e.g.
- .BR alpha .
- Constellation names must be the three-letter abbreviations.
- The output
- is the SAO number.
- For non-Greek names, catalog numbers and names are listed for all objects with
- names for which the given name is a prefix.
- .TP
- .B 12h34m -16
- Coordinates in the sky are translated to the nearest `patch',
- approximately one square degree of sky.
- The output is the coordinates identifying the patch,
- the constellations touching the patch, and the Abell, NGC, and SAO
- objects in the patch.
- The program prints sky positions in several formats corresponding
- to different precisions; any output format is understood as input.
- .TP
- .B umi
- All the patches in the named constellation.
- .TP
- .B mars
- The planets are identified by their names.
- The names
- .B shadow
- and
- .B comet
- refer to the earth's penumbra at lunar distance and the comet installed in the current
- .IR astro (7).
- The output is the planet's name, right ascension and declination, azimuth and altitude, and phase
- for the moon and sun, as shown by
- .BR astro .
- The positions are current at the start of
- .I scat 's
- execution; see the
- .B astro
- command in the next section for more information.
- .PP
- The commands are:
- .TF print
- .TP
- .BI add " item"
- Add the named item to the set.
- .TP
- .BI keep " class ..."
- Flatten the set and cull it, keeping only the specified classes.
- The classes may be specific NGC types,
- all stars
- .RB ( sao ),
- all NGC objects
- .RB ( ngc ),
- all M objects
- .RB ( m ),
- all Abell clusters
- .RB ( abell ),
- or a specified brightness range.
- Brightness ranges are specified by a leading
- .B >
- or
- .B <
- followed by a magnitude.
- Remember that brighter objects have lesser magnitudes.
- .TP
- .BI drop " class ..."
- Complement to
- .BR keep .
- .TP
- .BI flat
- Some items such as patches represents sets of items.
- .I Flat
- flattens the set so
- .I scat
- holds all the information available for the objects in the set.
- .TP
- .BI print
- Print the contents of the set. If the information seems meager, try
- flattening the set.
- .TP
- .BI expand " n"
- Flatten the set,
- expand the area of the sky covered by the set to be
- .I n
- degrees wider, and collect all the objects in that area.
- If
- .I n
- is zero,
- .I expand
- collects all objects in the patches that cover the current set.
- .TP
- .BI astro " option"
- Run
- .IR astro (7)
- with the specified
- .I options
- (to which will be appended
- .BR -p ),
- to discover the positions of the planets.
- .BR Astro 's
- .B -d
- and
- .B -l
- options can be used to set the time and place; by default, it's right now at the coordinates in
- .BR /lib/sky/here .
- Running
- .B astro
- does not change the positions of planets already in the display set,
- so
- .B astro
- may be run multiple times, executing e.g.
- .B "add mars"
- each time, to plot a series of planetary positions.
- .TP
- .BI plot " option"
- Expand and plot the set in a new window on the screen.
- Symbols for NGC objects are as in Sky Atlas 2000.0, except that open clusters
- are shown as stippled disks rather than circles.
- Abell clusters are plotted as a triangle of ellipses.
- The planets are drawn as disks of representative color with the first letter of the name
- in the disk (lower case for inferior planets; upper case for superior);
- the sun, moon, and earth's shadow are unlabeled disks.
- Objects larger than a few pixels are plotted to scale; however,
- .I scat
- does not have the information necessary to show the correct orientation for galaxies.
- .IP
- The option
- .B nogrid
- suppresses the lines of declination and right ascension.
- By default,
- .I scat
- labels NGC objects, Abell clusters, and bright stars; option
- .B nolabel
- suppresses these while
- .B alllabel
- labels stars with their SAO number as well.
- The default size is 512×512; options
- .B dx
- .I n
- and
- .BR dy
- .I n
- set the
- .I x
- and
- .I y
- extent.
- The option
- .B zenithup
- orients the map so it appears as it would in the sky at the time and
- location used by the
- .B astro
- command
- .RI ( q.v. ).
- .IP
- The output is designed to look best on an LCD display.
- CRTs have trouble with the thin, grey lines and dim stars.
- The option
- .B nogrey
- uses white instead of grey for these details, improving visibility
- at the cost of legibility when plotting on CRTs.
- .TP
- .B "plate \f1[[\f2ra dec\f1] \f2rasize\f1 [\f2decsize\f1]]"
- Display the section of the Digitized Sky Survey (plate scale
- approximately 1.7 arcseconds per pixel) centered on the
- given right ascension and declination or, if no position is specified, the
- current set of objects. The maximum area that will be displayed
- is one degree on a side. The horizontal and vertical sizes may
- be specified in the usual notation for angles.
- If the second size is omitted, a square region is displayed.
- If no size is specified, the size is sufficient to display the centers
- of all the
- objects in the current set. If a single object is in the set, the
- 500×500 pixel block from the survey containing the center
- of the object is displayed.
- The survey is stored in the CD-ROM juke box; run
- .B 9fs
- .B juke
- before running
- .IR scat .
- .TP
- .BI gamma " value"
- Set the gamma for converting plates to images. Default is \-1.0.
- Negative values display white stars, positive black.
- The images look best on displays with depth 8 or greater.
- .I Scat
- does not change the hardware color map, which
- should be set externally to a grey scale; try the command
- .B getmap gamma
- (see
- .IR getmap (9.1))
- on an 8-bit color-mapped display.
- .PD
- .SH EXAMPLES
- Plot the Messier objects and naked-eye stars in Orion.
- .EX
- ori
- keep m <6
- plot nogrid
- .EE
- .PP
- Draw a finder chart for Uranus:
- .EX
- uranus
- expand 5
- plot
- .EE
- .PP
- Show a partial lunar eclipse:
- .EX
- astro -d
- 2000 07 16 12 45
- moon
- add shadow
- expand 2
- plot
- .EE
- .PP
- Draw a map of the Pleiades.
- .EX
- "alcyone"
- expand 1
- plot
- .EE
- .PP
- Show a pretty galaxy.
- .EX
- ngc1300
- plate 10'
- .EE
- .SH FILES
- .B /lib/sky/*.scat
- .SH SOURCE
- .B /sys/src/cmd/scat
- .SH SEE ALSO
- .IR astro (7)
- .br
- .B /lib/sky/constelnames\ \
- the three-letter abbreviations of the constellation names.
- .PP
- The data was provided by the Astronomical Data Center at the NASA Goddard
- Space Flight Center, except for NGC2000.0, which is Copyright © 1988, Sky
- Publishing Corporation, used (but not distributed) by permission. The Digitized Sky Survey, 102
- CD-ROMs, is not distributed with the system.
|