This section describes the different types of selections available in
catselect. The various types of selection are listed in
Table
.
. Occasionally you may need
to enter an expression which is longer than a single line. Such long
expressions can be entered using the continuation line mechanism
described in Section
.
) then the minimum and
maximum values can optionally be entered as sexagesimal values in
hours or degrees. The usual rules for interpreting sexagesimal
values in expressions are followed. For example any of the following
three values could be entered and all correspond to the same
coordinate:
| 3:00:00 | (hours) | |
| +45:00:00 | (degrees) | |
| 0.78539816 | (radians) |
You will first be prompted for the names of the column containing the Right Ascension and then the column containing the Declination. Next you will be prompted for the Right Ascension of the central position followed by the central Declination. Finally you will be prompted for the radius of the circle.
The Right Ascension should be entered as a sexagesimal value in
hours, the Declination as a sexagesimal value in degrees and the
radius as a sexagesimal value in minutes of arc. For example, to
specify a search to find objects within twenty-three minutes of arc
of Right Ascension
and Declination
.
the values entered would be:
Central Right Ascension: 10:30:00 Central Declination: 35:00:00 Radius: 23:00
If a search radius of twenty-three seconds of arc was required the value entered would be `0:23' (note the leading zero and colon). A decimal point and fractional seconds of arc can be entered if required. For example, twenty-three and a half seconds of arc would be entered as `0:23.5'.
The coordinates of the polygon corners are read from a CURSA
catalogue which you should prepare before running catselect.
This polygon catalogue is probably most easily prepared using the
STL format (see Appendix
); then it can simply be typed in
with a text editor.
All that the catalogue needs to contain are the two columns
containing the coordinates of the polygon corners. The names of
these columns are not fixed; catselect prompts for them.
Figure
shows an example STL format polygon catalogue.
This example is available as file:
/star/share/cursa/polygon.TXT
Once the `polygonal area' option has been selected you will be
prompted to enter the names of the columns holding the
and
coordinates in which the polygon is defined in the input
catalogue, the name of the polygon catalogue and finally the names
of the columns holding the
and
coordinates in the polygon
catalogue (X and Y in Figure
).
) or catview (see
Section
) in the case where the original catalogue was too
large for interactive analysis.
CURSA Catalogue and Table Manipulation Applications