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STVID

Introduction

STVID (satellite tools for video) is a set of applications for observing the night sky with video cameras and detecting, measuring and identifying satellites in these observations.

Example setup and results

STVID provides the following features:

  • Automatic start and end of data acquisition
  • Compression of raw video frames using the maximum temporal pixel method (Gural & Segon 2009)
  • Detection of satellites in position and time using the 3D Hough transform (Dalitz et al. 2017)
  • Fast calculation of satellite predictions using different orbital catalogs of two-line elements (TLEs)
  • Matching and identification of detected satellites against predictions
  • Output results in IOD format for publishing on SeeSat-L

Table of Contents

  1. Requirements
  2. Installation
  3. Configuration
  4. Operation
  5. Supported hardware

Requirements

  • A computer desktop or single board computer like a Raspberry PI) with a linux operating system for running STVID
  • An internet connection to allow time synchronization using the Network Time Protocol (NTP)
  • An analog video or digital CMOS camera. Currently supported cameras are:
    • Any camera working with OpenCV
    • ZWO ASI cameras
    • Raspberry Pi HQ camera
  • A fast photographic lens, F/1.8 or faster, capable of delivering a pixel scale of 30 to 60 arsec/pix
  • (optional) A weather proof CCTV housing

Installation

To install STVID, several dependencies need to be met. The following sections will detail the installation. The system wide installation commands provided here are specific for the Ubuntu 22.04 operating system, but similar software packages will be available for other operating systems.

Dependencies

The following assumes the dependencies are installed in $HOME/software. Adjust this as necessary. To create this directory, run the following command.

mkdir -p $HOME/software                                  # Create directory

hough3dlines

The hough3dlines application is used to detect satellite trails in 3 dimensions (x and y position over time). The following commands will download, compile and install the hough3dlines executable in /usr/local/bin.

sudo apt install git make g++ libeigen3-dev              # Install dependencies
cd $HOME/software                                        # Goto directory
git clone https://gitlab.com/pierros/hough3d-code.git    # Clone repository
cd $HOME/software/hough3d-code                           # Goto directory
make                                                     # Compile application
sudo cp hough3dlines /usr/local/bin/                     # Install executable
make test                                                # Test installation (optional)

satpredict

Predictions of satellite positions, using two-line elements (TLEs), are computed using satpredict.

sudo apt install make                                     # Install dependencies
cd $HOME/software                                        # Goto directory
git clone https://github.com/cbassa/satpredict.git       # Clone repository
cd $HOME/software/satpredict                             # Goto directory
make                                                     # Compile application
sudo make install                                        # Install executable

source-extractor

Stars are detected, and their positions and instrumental fluxes measured, using the source-extractor application. Depending on the operating system, this application can be known as the source-extractor, sextractor or sex executables. STVID expects this to be present in the path as sextractor, so the executable may need to be copied to the sextractor name. On Ubuntu 22.04 it is known as source-extractor.

sudo apt install source-extractor                              # Install binary
sudo cp /usr/bin/source-extractor /usr/local/bin/sextractor    # Copy executable

astrometry.net

The initial astrometric calibration of the STVID observations is performed with astrometry.net. This application can be installed with the following command.

sudo apt install astrometry.net                                # Install binary

This application needs index files, which can be downloaded from data.astrometry.net. For the widefield observations obtained with STVID, we need to download the 4100 series images (340MB in total). Check where the add_path variable in /etc/astrometry.cfg where the application will search for index files. Usually this is /usr/share/astrometry. These can be downloaded (as root) as follows.

sudo bash                                                      # Create a session with root privileges
cd /usr/share/astrometry                                       # Goto the add_path directory
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4107.fits        # Download index files
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4108.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4109.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4110.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4111.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4112.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4113.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4114.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4115.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4116.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4117.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4118.fits
wget -c http://data.astrometry.net/4100/index-4119.fits
exit                                                           # Exit session

ZWO ASI SDK and ASIStudio (optional)

For users that will operate ZWO ASI cameras, you will need to download and install the ZWO ASI SDK (software developers kit). Go to the ZWO ASI software and drivers page and click the Developers tab. Download the Linux & Mac SDK. This likely is called something like ASI_linux_max_SDK_V1.28.tar.bz2. This file can be extracted as follows (assuming the file is downloaded into the $HOME directory; adjust as necessary.

cd $HOME/software                                              # Goto directory
bzip2 -cd $HOME/ASI_linux_mac_SDK_V1.28.tar.bz2 | tar xvf -    # Extract archive

To operate and focus a ZWO ASI camera, it is recommended to install the ASIStudio software from ZWO ASI. This software will allow you to test the camera indepently from STVID and will help with pointing and focusing by giving you full interactive control of all camera properties. The installation of this software will also ensure that the ZWO ASI camera will get the necessary user permissions for it to operate with STVID.

To download ASIStudio, click the Linux tab at ZWO ASI software and drivers page and download the x64 version of ASIStudio. This will likely download a file called ASIStudio_V1.8.run. The following commands will run the installer (assuming the file is downloaded in the $HOME directory).

chmod +x $HOME/ASIStudio_V1.8.run                              # Set permissions to execute installer
$HOME/ASIStudio_V1.8.run                                       # Execute installer

The ASIStudio installer will ask where to install the applications and to accept their license. Once installed, run the ASICap application with your ZWO ASI camera attached. The application will ask to you to provide the sudo credentials to install the udev rules setting the necessary user permissions. Once those are set, you should be able to operate your camera from within ASICap.

STVID installation

With the dependencies installed, we can install STVID using the following commands.

sudo apt install python-is-python3 python3-pip                 # Install python3 and pip
cd $HOME/software                                              # Goto directory
git clone https:/github.com/cbassa/stvid.git                   # Clone STVID repository
cd $HOME/software/stvid                                        # Goto directory
pip install -r requirements.txt                                # Install python requirements

Configuration

STVID is configured through a configuration file. A boiler plate configuration file is included as configuration.ini-dist. Copy this file to configuration.ini using the following command

cp configuration.ini-dist configuration.ini          # Copy configuration file

Most parameters in configuration.ini do not need to be changed, except for the following:

Observer

  • cospar: A COSPAR number if you have one, use a number between 9900 and 9999 otherwise.
  • name, latitude, longitude, height: Your name and location (latitude, longitude, height) in the WGS84 coordinate frame.

Setup

  • camera_type: Your camera selection (ASI for ZWO ASI cameras, CV2 for opencv cameras, PI for the Raspberry Pi HQ camera).
  • observations_path: Directory where you want to store the observations.

Credentials

It is highly recommended to use the catalog of two-line elements (TLEs) from space-track.org. Use the credentials of your account to download TLEs.

Elements

This section describes the TLE catalog that STVID downloads and how they are used and plotted.

  • tlepath: Directory where you want to store the TLE catalogs

ZWO ASI cameras

For ZWO ASI cameras you need to specify the location of the ZWO ASI SDK libraries. For x64 operating systems this is the lib/x64/libASICamera2.so shared library in the directory tree where you installed the SDK.

Operation

There are three applications in STVID that work together:

  • update_tle.py to download orbital catalogs of two-line elements (TLEs).
  • acquire.py to capture data from your camera and store them as FITS files.
  • process.py to analyse the FITS files and determine satellite positions.

Updating TLEs

Assuming you have installed STVID in $HOME/software/stvid and your configuration is stored in configuration.ini, the TLE catalogs can be updated with the following command.

$HOME/software/stvid/update_tle.py -c $HOME/software/stvid/configuration.ini

This will download TLE catalogs from the following sources:

  1. The master catalog called catalog.tle from https://www.space-track.org. This requires your space-track.org credentials to be provided in configuration.ini.
  2. The classified catalog classfd.tle from Mike McCants. This catalog has TLEs for classified objects not present in catalog.tle.
  3. The integrated elements inttles.tle from Mike McCants. These are numerically integrated orbits converted into TLEs for objects at high altitudes.
  4. Supplemental TLEs for Starlink satellites in starlink.tle from celestrak.com. These are TLEs computed from orbital ephemerides shared by the satellite operators and include predicted manouvers. These TLEs tend to be more accurate than those in catalog.tle which are based on observations.
  5. Supplemental TLEs for OneWeb satellites in oneweb.tle from celestrak.com. These are TLEs computed from orbital ephemerides shared by the satellite operators and include predicted manouvers. These TLEs tend to be more accurate than those in catalog.tle which are based on observations.

Supported hardware

TBD

Todo

Features to be implemented.

High priority

  • Use sunset/sunrise times for starting/stopping data acquisition.
  • Automatic astrometric calibration.
  • Recognize unidentified satellite/meteor tracks using 3D Hough transform.

Medium priority

  • Pause data acquisition of the current line-of-sight (alt/az) is in the Earth's shadow for a particular orbital altitude.
  • Investigate sensitivity loss of significance=(max-mean)/sigma if the four frame images are stored as 8bit integers instead of floats.

Low priority

  • Implement python based star finding (stick with source extractor for now).
  • Migrate to python based SGP4/SDP4 algorithms
  • Use masks to mask unilluminated CCD areas.
  • Investigate automatic submission of IOD measurements to SeeSat-L.
  • Migrate user settings to a configuration file.

Run acquisition at startup

  • Add user to video group (sudo adduser <username> video).
  • Add video device to udev rules (add SUBSYSTEM=="video1", GROUP="video", MODE="0660" in /etc/udev/rules.d/10-webcam.rules).
  • Create start up script in /etc/init.d. Call capture script as user with su <username> -c "acquire.py".

License

© 2018-2023 Cees Bassa

Licensed under the GPLv3.

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