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		| Paper: | 
		The Next Generation of HLA Image Products | 
	 
	
		| Volume: | 
		461, Astronomical Data Analysis Software and Systems XXI | 
	 
	
		| Page: | 
		673 | 
	 
	
		| Authors: | 
		Gaffney, N. I.; Casertano, S.; Ferguson, B. | 
	 
	
	
		| Abstract: | 
		We present the re-engineered pipeline based on existing and improved
 algorithms with the aim of improving processing quality,
 cross-instrument portability, data flow management, and software
 maintenance. The Hubble Legacy Archive (HLA) is a project to add value to the Hubble 
 Space Telescope data archive by producing and delivering science-ready 
 drizzled data products and source lists derived from these products. 
 Initially, ACS, NICMOS, and WFCP2 data were combined using 
 instrument-specific pipelines based on scripts developed to process the 
 ACS GOODS data and a separate set of scripts to generate source 
 extractor and DAOPhot source lists. 
 The new pipeline, initially designed for WFC3 data,
 isolates instrument-specific processing and is easily extendable to
 other instruments and to generating wide-area mosaics. Significant
 improvements have been made in image combination using improved
 alignment, source detection, and background equalization routines. It
 integrates improved alignment procedures, better noise model, and source
 list generation within a single code base. Wherever practical, PyRAF
 based routines have been replaced with non-IRAF based python libraries
 (e.g. NumPy and PyFITS). The data formats have been modified to handle
 better and more consistent propagation of information from individual
 exposures to the combined products. A new exposure layer stores the
 effective exposure time for each pixel in the sky which is key in
 properly interpreting combined images from diverse data that were not
 initially planned to be mosaiced. We worked to improve the validity of
 the metadata within our FITS headers for these products relative to
 standard IRAF/PyRAF processing. Any keywords that pertain to individual
 exposures have been removed from the primary and extension headers and
 placed in a table extension for more direct and efficient perusal. This
 mechanism also allows for more detailed information on the processing of
 individual images to be stored and propagated providing a more
 hierarchical metadata storage system than key value pair FITS headers
 provide. In this poster we will discuss the changes to the pipeline
 processing and source list generation and the lessons learned which may
 be applicable to other archive projects as well as discuss our new
 metadata curation and preservation process. | 
	 
	
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