My software career comes to an end on July 1, 2022 and with it will end active development of JS9. Please plan accordingly. Eric
JS9: astronomical image display everywhere
What does it do?
- display FITS images, binary tables, data cubes, and multi-extension files
- colormaps, scaling, pan, zoom, binning, blending, print, export ...
- region support: create, manipulate, import, export, ...
- drag and drop images, regions, catalogs
- server-side and local analysis using the JS9 public API
- control JS9 using scripts from the Linux shell or Python
- runs on Macs, Linux, Windows, iPads, iPhones, ...
- runs as a Desktop app in all modern browsers
- utilizes WebAssembly (FITS processing at near native speed!)
How can I try it out?
Go to JS9 web site and drag a FITS data file onto the JS9 display:
https://js9.si.edu
You can even specify a remote FITS file and associated image display parameters as part of the URL:
https://js9.si.edu/js9/js9.html?url=https://hea-www.cfa.harvard.edu/~eric/coma.fits.gz&colormap=cool
The JS9 web site also contains on-line documentation, demos, and release downloads.
To install or not to install ...
For many users, there is no need to install JS9: simply use the JS9 web site to display your data. You can even upload your FITS files to the web site and run our server-side analysis.
Installing JS9 allows you to create your own web pages, tailor site parameters, and add your own local and server-based analysis tasks. Grab the latest version from JS9 on GitHub:
git clone https://github.com/ericmandel/js9
Load a local page into your browser:
file:///path/to/js9/js9.html
(NB: Chrome needs to run with the --allow-file-access-from-files switch to use the file URI.)
For Desktop use, install Electron.js and use the js9 script to start the Desktop app and load an image:
js9 -a ~/data/m13.fits
For more advanced support (web-based support, support for handling large files), build the JS9 helper and install JS9 in a web directory:
# configure location to install the JS9 web files,
# where to find cfitsio library and include files,
# where to install programs and scripts,
# what sort of helper to build:
./configure --with-webdir=[path_to_web_install] \
--with-cfitsio=[path_to_cfitsio] \
--prefix=[path_to_prog_install] \
--with-helper=nodejs
# the usual ...
make
make install
# start helper
cd path_to_web_install
# in the bash shell:
node js9Helper.js 1>~/logs/js9node.log 2>&1 &
# or, in the tcsh shell:
node js9Helper.js >& ~/logs/js9node.log &
What about scripting?
The js9 script allows you to control a JS9 web page from the Linux command line using the JS9 Public API (scripting requires installation of JS9 and either node.js or Electron.js):
js9 Load chandra.fits '{"scale":"log","colormap":"red","contrast":5.78,"bias":0.15}'
js9 Load spitzer.fits '{"scale":"log","colormap":"blue","contrast":6.3,"bias":0.54}'
js9 ReprojectData chandra.fits
Python users can install pyjs9:
git clone https://github.com/ericmandel/pyjs9
...
import pyjs9
j = pyjs9.JS9()
j.Load('chandra.fits', '{"scale":"log","colormap":"red","contrast":5.78,"bias":0.15}')
j.Load('spitzer.fits', '{"scale":"log","colormap":"blue","contrast":6.3,"bias":0.54}')
j.ReprojectData('chandra.fits')
What's the license?
JS9 is distributed under the terms of The MIT License.
What's the recent release history?
Who's responsible?
Eric Mandel, Alexey Vikhlinin
Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian