The tools we describe further were extensively tested on many sets of data in the framework of signal processing and communication. Their ability to give a pertinent solution to Eq. (1) was studied taking into account various conditions (Cardoso et al. 1999; Pajunen & Karhunen 2000). So, there is no point to give in this paper experiments on simulated data.
We chose to test BSS tools on HST images of the Seyfert radiogalaxy 3C 120. This object displays a one side radio jet, which has been optically identified (Lelièvre et al. 1994). The best HST observations were made with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) through the filters F547M, F555W, F675W, and F814W by J. Westphal, on July 25th 1995. The exposure characteristics are given in Table 1.
Filter | Color | Exposure (s) |
F547M | V1 |
![]() |
F555W | V |
![]() |
F675W | R |
![]() |
F814W | I |
![]() |
The transmission profiles of the filters are drawn in
Fig. 1.
![]() |
Figure 1: The four filters used: F547M (full line), F555W (dashed line), F675W (dot-dashed line) and F814W (dotted line). The galaxy spectrum in the nuclear part (Oke et al. 1980) is superimposed on these profiles (dashed-dotted line) |
The central WFPC2 observations correspond to images of
pixels. The pixel size is
.
We have
extracted the central part of
pixels,
corresponding to a region of
.
The observations were made with a CCD receiver. The detector noise
is low, and the photon noise is dominant in the galaxy region. As
the noise is not stationary Gaussian, a generalized Anscombe
transform (Murtagh et al. 1995) allowed us to stabilize its
variance. A pixel value v is transformed by the relation:
For each resulting image, the background value is estimated and subtracted. Then the images (Fig. 2) can be considered clean enough to be processed by BSS algorithms.
![]() |
Figure 2: HST/WFPC2 images of the radiogalaxy 3C 120 respectively obtained with the filters F547M, F555W, F675W and F814W. The images were processed in order to stabilize the noise variance |
We note that the images were not linearly transformed. Roughly speaking we took their square roots (Eq. 2). By this transformation we destroyed the hypothetical linearity between the images and the sources as written in Eq. (1). We can imagine that this Eq. (1) constitutes only a working hypothesis. With the transformation given by Eq. (2), the dynamical amplitude is then reduced and the nucleus plays a smaller part in the computations. We do not search for a perfect photometric model, but we want to exhibit coherent image structures.
Copyright The European Southern Observatory (ESO)