Provided by: gyoto-bin_2.0.2-1.1build3_amd64 bug

NAME

       Gyoto - the General relativitY Orbit Tracer of Observatoire de Paris

SYNOPSIS

       gyoto [--silent|--quiet|--verbose[=N]|--debug]
             [--no-sigfpe]
             [--help[=class]] [--version] [--list]
             [--ispec=i0:i1:di] [--jspec=j0:j1:dj]
             ([--imin=i0] [--imax=i1] [--di=di])
             ([--jmin=j0] [--jmax=j1] [--dj=dj])
             [--time=tobs] [--tmin=tmin]
             [--fov=angle] [--resolution=npix] [--distance=dist]
             [--paln=Omega] [--inclination=i] [--argument=theta]
             [--nthreads=nth] [--nprocesses=nworkers]
             [--plugins=pluglist]
             [--impact-coords[=fname.fits]]
             [--unit[=unit]]
             [--parameter=Path::Name[=value]]
             [--xmlwrite=output.xml]
             [--] input.xml output.fits

       gyoto mk-video [options]

DESCRIPTION

       Gyoto  is  a framework for computing geodesics in curved space-times. The gyoto utility program uses this
       framework to compute images of astronomical objects in the  vicinity  of  compact  objects  (e.g.  black-
       holes). Such images are distorted by strong gravitational lensing.

       In  the  first  form,  gyoto takes a scenery description in XML format (input.xml), computes this scenery
       using relativistic ray-tracing, and saves the result in FITS format.

       In the second form, gyoto produces a movie. See gyoto mk-video --help for details. In particular, it  can
       read  a  Scenery in XML format and a trajectory also in XML format (for instance produced with gyotoy(1),
       see below) and produce a movie as would be seen by an observer following this trajectory. The Gyoto plug-
       in python and the Python module OpenCV-Python must  be  installed.  The  Python  flavor  to  use  can  be
       controlled through the GYOTO_PYTHON environment variable.

       A  companion  program,  gyotoy(1),  can be used to interactively visualize a single geodesic in any Gyoto
       metric (the trajectory of a single photon or massive particle).

       Ray-tracing can be very time consuming. It is possible to interrupt the process at any  time  by  hitting
       ^C,  which  will  save  the  already-computed  part of the image before exiting the program. You can then
       compute the rest of the image later using the --jmin option.

OPTIONS

       The gyoto program accepts many options. Most have a long name (e.g. --parameter) and a short  name  (e.g.
       -E).  When  an  option  takes  an  argument, this argument must follow immediately the short option (e.g.
       -EPath::Name)  and  be  separated  from  the  long  option   by   exactly   the   character   "="   (e.g.
       --parameter=Path::Name). Long options can be abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is unambiguous (e.g.
       --par=Path::Name).  Most  options  can appear several times and are processed in the order they appear in
       the command line. The two positional parameters (input.xml and output.fits) can appear  anywhere  in  the
       command  line, except if they start with a minus character (-) in which case they must appear last, after
       the option --.

   Getting help
       --help[=class]
       -h[class]
              Without argument class, print help summary. Although not as  verbose  as  this  manual  page,  the
              output  of  gyoto -h may be more complete and up to date. If class is specified, list and document
              the properties of class (e.g. "Screen", "Astrobj::Star"). Then exit  the  program,  unless  --list
              below has only been specified.

       --list
       -l     Print  list of currently registered Astrobj, Metric etc., then exit the program. This occurs after
              loading input.xml (if provided), so that any plug-in specified in the input file have already been
              loaded.

       --version
       -V     Print the Gyoto version, ABI compatibility version, copyright information and exit.

   Setting the verbosity level
       Those options are processed separately from the other and take effect early in the program execution.

       --silent
       -s     No output.

       --quiet
       -q     Minimal output.

       --verbose[=N]
       -v[N]  Verbose mode. Verbosity level N may be specified.

       --debug
       -d     Insanely verbose.

       --no-sigfpe
              Do not try to raise SIGFPE upon arithmetic exceptions. This option is meaningful  only  if  fenv.h
              support is built in. Else this option is a no-op as SIGFPE is never raised.

   Loading plug-ins
       --plugins[=[nofail:]plug1[,[nofail:]plug2][...]]
       -p[[nofail:]plug1[,[nofail:]plug2][...]]
              Comma-separated list of Gyoto plugins to load. Overrides GYOTO_PLUGINS environment variable below.
              Only the last occurrence matters.

   Selecting a region
       It  is  possible  to ray-trace only part of the scenery by providing the pixel coordinates of the bottom-
       left (i0, j0) and top-right (i1, j1) corners of the region. The bottom-left pixel of the  complete  image
       has coordinates i=1 and j=1. The step in each direction (di, dj) can also be specified.

       --ispec=[i0]:[i1]:[di]
       -i[i0]:[i1]:[di]
       --jspec=[j0]:[j1]:[dj]
       -j[j0]:[j1]:[dj]
              Default values: x0: 1; x1: npix (see option --resolution below); dx: 1.

       --ispec=N
       -iN
       --jspec=N
       -jN    Set both x0 and x1 to N.

   Alternate region-selection options:
       Those  options  are  still supported for backward compatibility. They are deprecated in favour of --ispec
       and --jspec above:

       --imin=i0
              Default value: 1.

       --imax=i1
              Default value: npix (see option --resolution below).

       --di=di
              Default value:1.

       --jmin=j0
              Default value: 1.

       --jmax=j1
              Default value: npix (see option --resolution below).

       --dj=dj
              Default value:1.

   Setting the camera position
       The following parameters are normally provided in the Screen section of input.xml but can  be  overridden
       on  the  command  line for instance to make a movie (by calling gyoto for each movie frame, changing only
       the option --time).

       --time=tobs
              The observing time in geometrical units.

       --fov=angle
              The field-of-view of the camera, in radians.

       --resolution=npix
       -rnpix Number of rows and columns in the output image.

       --distance=dist
              (Coordinate) distance from the observer to the center of the  coordinate  system,  in  geometrical
              units.

       --paln=Omega
              Position angle of the line of nodes, in radians, East of North. The is the angle between the North
              direction and the line of nodes (see below).

       --inclination=i
              Angle  between  the plane of the sky and the equator of the coordinate system. The intersection of
              those two planes is the line of nodes.

       --argument=theta
              Angle in the equatorial plane between the line of nodes and one of the main axes of the coordinate
              system.

   Miscellaneous
       Unsorted option(s):

       --     Ends option processing, in case either input.xml or output.fits starts with "-".

       --nthreads=nth
       -Tnth  Number of parallel threads to use. For instance, on a dual-core machine, --nthreads=2 should yield
              the fastest computation. This option is silently ignored  if  Gyoto  was  compiled  without  POSIX
              threads  support. Note that the metric and object are replicated for each thread which can lead to
              a decrease in performance if either is memory-intensive. Setting this option to 0 is equivalent to
              setting it to 1.

       --nprocesses=nworkers
       -Pnworkers
              Number of MPI processes to spawn for parallel ray-tracing, in addition to the main  gyoto  process
              which  remains  for  managing  the computation. Ignored if gyoto was compiled without MPI support.
              nworkers is the number of workers spawned. The total number  of  processes  is  nprocs=nworkers+1.
              -P0  disables  MPI  multi-processing, while -P1 uses two processes: the manager and one worker. If
              nworkers is >0, --nthreads is ignored. Note that the MPI environment usually needs  to  be  set-up
              using  some  variant  of mpirun(1).  If mpirun starts several instances of gyoto, nworkers must be
              >0, but its exact value is ignored as the set of  processes  used  is  exactly  that  launched  by
              mpirun.  In  other  words,  Gyoto  can  be  called in a number of ways that should be functionally
              equivalent:

              •   let mpirun launch nprocs instances of the gyoto executable:

                  mpirun -np -Pnprocs gyoto -P1 input.xml output.fits

              •   let mpirun launch 1 instance  of  the  gyoto  executable,  and  Gyoto  spawn  nworkers  worker
                  processes:

                  mpirun -np 1 gyoto -Pworkers input.xml output.fits

              •   let mpirun launch 1 instance of the gyoto executable, and nworkers worker processes:

                  mpirun -np 1 gyoto -P1 input.xml output.fits : \
                         -np nworkers gyoto-mpi-worker.version

                  where version is the ABI compatibility version of gyoto (see gyoto --version).

       --impact-coords[=impactcoords.fits]
              In  some  circumstances,  you  may  want  to  perform  several  computations in which the computed
              geodesics end up being exactly identical. This is the case for instance if you want to  experiment
              changing  the  spectrum of a star or when making a movie of a rotating, optically thick disk. This
              option provides a mechanism to not recompute the geodesics in the most simple case:

              •   the Screen is always at the same position;

              •   the Metric is always exactly the same;

              •   the Astrobj is optically thick (no radiative transfer processing is necessary);

              •   the location and shape of the Astrobj is always the same.

              If --impact-coords is passed without specifying impactcoords.fits, the 8-coordinate vectors of the
              object and photon at impact point are saved for each point of the Screen. Missing data (no impact)
              are set to DBL_MAX. These data are saved as a supplementary image HDU in the FITS  file  which  is
              identified  by its EXTNAME: "Gyoto Impact Coordinates". The FITS keyword "HIERARCH Gyoto Observing
              Date" of this HDU holds the observing date (in geometrical unit).

              If impactcoords.fits is specified, the above mentioned data are read back from this file. The ray-
              tracing is not performed, but the Gyoto::Astrobj::Generic::processHitQuantities() method is called
              directly, yielding the same result if the four conditions above are met. The observing date stored
              in the FITS keyword "HIERARCH Gyoto Observing Date" is compared  to  the  date  specified  in  the
              screen or using the --time option and the impact coordinates are shifted in time accordingly.

              It is also possible to set the two versions of this option at the same time:
                     --impact-coords=impactcoords.fits --impact-coords
              In  this  case, the impact coordinates are read from impactcoords.fits, shifted in time, and saved
              in output.fits.

       --unit[=unit]
       -u[unit]
              Specify unit to use for allowing instances of --parameter, until next instance of --unit.

       --parameter=Path::Name[=value]
       -EPath::Name[=value]
              Set arbitrary parameter by name. Parameters can be set in the Astrobj, Metric etc. using the  Path
              componenent. For instance,

              For  instance,  assuming  the Astrobj in star.xml has a property named "Radius" that can be set in
              unit "km", and a property named "Spectrum" which has a property named "Temperature",  we  can  set
              the radius, temperature and the quantities to compute (a property in the Scenery itself) with:
                 gyoto -EQuantities=Spectrum \
                       -ukm -EAstrobj::Radius=3 \
                       -u -EAstrobj::Spectrum::Temperature=1000 \
                       star.xml star.fits

                 gyoto --parameter=Quantities=Spectrum \
                       --unit=km --parameter=Astrobj::Radius=3 \
                       --unit="" --param=Astrobj::Spectrum::Temperature=1000 \
                       star.xml star.fits

       --xmlwrite=output.xml
       -Xoutput.xml
              Write  back  scenery  to  an XML file. The new file will contain additional default parameters and
              reflect the effect of --(astrobj|metric|scenery|screen|spectrometer)-parameter that appear  before
              --xmlwrite. Can appear several times, e.g. to generate several XML files with different settings.

FILES

       input.xml
              A  gyoto  input  file  in  XML  format.  Several  examples are provided in the source doc/examples
              directory. Depending on how you installed gyoto, they may be installed on your system in  a  place
              such  as  /usr/share/doc/libgyoto/examples/.  It goes beyond the scope of this manpage to document
              the XML file format supported by Gyoto, please refer to the library  documentation  which  may  be
              distributed  by  your package manager, can be compiled from the Gyoto source, and can be consulted
              online at http://gyoto.obspm.fr/.

       output.fits
              The output image in FITS format. gyoto will not overwrite output.fits unless it is  prefixed  with
              an  (escaped)  "!": "gyoto in.xml \!out.fits". This file may actually consist in a stack of images
              depending on the Gyoto Quantities and on the Spectrometer  specified  in  input.xml.  For  further
              information on the FITS format, see http://fits.gsfc.nasa.gov/.

ENVIRONMENT

       GYOTO_PLUGINS
              Gyoto  astronomical  objects  and metrics are implemented in plug-ins. To use more (or less!) than
              the standard plug-ins, you may set the environment variable  GYOTO_PLUGINS  to  a  comma-separated
              list  of  plug-ins.  gyoto  will  exit with an error status if unable to load a specified plug-in,
              unless it is prefixed with "nofail:" in GYOTO_PLUGINS. This environment variable is overridden  by
              he  --plugins  command-line  parameter.  Default value: "stdplug,nofail:lorene". Gyoto attempts to
              find plug-ins first by relying on the system's dynamic linker (so paths  in  e.g.  LD_LIBRARY_PATH
              and  ld.so.conf  are  searched first). If that fails, it looks in PREFIX/lib/gyoto/ and finally in
              PREFIX/lib/gyoto/SOVERS/ where PREFIX and SOVERS are two compile-time options. PREFIX  usually  is
              /usr/local or /usr. At the time of writing, SOVERS is 0.0.0.

       GYOTO_PYTHON
              The  name of the Python plug-in to use for mk-video (typically either "python3" or a more specific
              version such as "python3.12"). By default several names are tried.

EXIT STATUS

       gyoto returns 0 upon success, 1 if unable to parse the command line or  to  interpret  input.xml,  and  a
       CFITSIO  error  code if an error occurs when trying to open, write to, or close output.fits. Refer to the
       CFITSIO documentation for more details.

AUTHOR

       Thibaut Paumard <thibaut.paumard@obspm.fr> wrote this manual.

SEE ALSO

       gyotoy(1)

Science                                           January 2024                                          GYOTO(1)