deeplenstronomy
is a tool for simulating large datasets for applying deep learning to strong gravitational lensing.
It works by wrapping the functionalities of lenstronomy
in a convenient yaml-style interface, allowing users to embrace the astronomer part of their brain rather than their programmer part when generating training datasets.
With conda (Recommended)
- Step 0: Set up an environment. This can be done straightforwardly with a
conda
installation:
conda create -n deeplens python=3.7 jupyter scipy pandas numpy matplotlib astropy h5py PyYAML mpmath future
conda activate deeplens
- Step 1:
pip install lenstronomy
- Step 2:
pip install deeplenstronomy
With pip
- Step 1:
pip install deeplenstronomy
Start by reading the Getting Started Guide to familiarize yourself with the deeplenstronomy
style.
After that, check out the example notebooks below:
- Creating
deeplenstronomy
Configuration Files - Generating Datasets
- Visualizing
deeplenstronomy
Images - Utilizing Astronomical Surveys
- Defining Your Own Probability Distributions
- Using Your Own Images as Backgrounds
- Simulating Time-Series Datasets
deeplenstronomy
is designed so that users only need to work with their personal configuration files and the dataset generatation and image visualization functions.
However, if you would like to view the full API documentation, you can visit the docs page.
If you use deeplenstronomy
in your work, please include the following citations:
@article{deeplenstronomy,
doi = {10.21105/joss.02854},
url = {https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.02854},
year = {2021},
publisher = {The Open Journal},
volume = {6},
number = {58},
pages = {2854},
author = {Robert Morgan and Brian Nord and Simon Birrer and Joshua Yao-Yu Lin and Jason Poh},
title = {deeplenstronomy: A dataset simulation package for strong gravitational lensing},
journal = {Journal of Open Source Software}
}
@article{lenstronomy,
title = "lenstronomy: Multi-purpose gravitational lens modelling software package",
journal = "Physics of the Dark Universe",
volume = "22",
pages = "189 - 201",
year = "2018",
issn = "2212-6864",
doi = "10.1016/j.dark.2018.11.002",
url = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212686418301869",
author = "Simon Birrer and Adam Amara",
keywords = "Gravitational lensing, Software, Image simulations"
}
If you have any questions or run into any errors with the beta release of deeplenstronomy
, please don't hesitate to reach out:
Rob Morgan
robert [dot] morgan [at] wisc.edu
You can also message me on the DES, DELVE, LSSTC, deepskies, or lenstronomers Slack workspaces