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In mantid, there are a variety of ways to filter events that are in an Event Workspace. They are FilterByTime and FilterByLogValue which will create a filter and apply it in a single step. The other way to filter events is to use FilterEvents which allows for a variety of workspaces to specify how an Event Workspace is split. This document focuses on how the create these workspaces and will largely ignore FilterByTime and FilterByLogValue.
FilterByTime v1 and FilterByLogValue v1 internally
generate event filters during execution that are not exposed to the
user. These algorithms can only split the neutron events by pulse
time and do not provide the equivalent of a FastLog=True
option.
FilterEvents v1 takes either a SplittersWorkspace
, TableWorkspace, or MatrixWorkspace as the
SplittersWorkspace
. The events are split into output workspaces
according to the times that they arrive detectors.
GenerateEventsFilter will create a
SplittersWorkspace
based on
its various options. This result can be supplied as the
SplittersWorkspace
input property of ref:algm-FilterEvents. It
will also generate an InformationWorkspace
which can be passed
along to GenerateEventsFilter.
Depending on the parameters in GenerateEventsFilter, the events will be filtered based on
their pulse times or their absolute times. An neutron event’s
absolute time is the summation of its pulse time and TOF.
Sometimes one wants to filter events based on arbitrary conditions. In
this case, one needs to go beyond what existing algorithms can do. For
this, one must generate their own splitters workspace. The workspace
is generally 3 columns, with the first two being start and stop times
and the third being the workspace index to put the events into. For
filtering with time relative to the start of the run, the first two
columns are float
. To specify the times as absolute, in the case
of filtering files that will be summed together, the first two columns
should be int64
. For both of the examples below, the filter
workspaces are created using the following function:
def create_table_workspace(table_ws_name, column_def_list):
CreateEmptyTableWorkspace(OutputWorkspace=table_ws_name)
table_ws = mtd[table_ws_name]
for col_tup in column_def_list:
data_type = col_tup[0]
col_name = col_tup[1]
table_ws.addColumn(data_type, col_name)
return table_ws
The easiest way to generate a custom event filter is to make one relative to the start time of the run or relative to a specified epoch. As the times in the table are seconds, a table can be created and used
filter_rel = create_table_workspace('custom_relative', [('float', 'start'), ('float', 'stop'), ('str', 'target')])
filter_rel.addRow((0,9500, '0'))
filter_rel.addRow((9500,19000, '1'))
FilterEvents(InputWorkspace='ws', SplitterWorkspace=filter_rel,
GroupWorkspaces=True, OutputWorkspaceBaseName='relative', RelativeTime=True)
This will generate an event filter relative to the start of the
run. Specifying the FilterStartTime
in FilterEvents, one can specify a different time that filtering
will be relative to.
If instead a custom filter is to be created with absolute time, the time must be processed somewhat to go into the table workspace. Much of the
abs_times = [datetime64('2014-12-12T09:11:22.538096666'), datetime64('2014-12-12T11:45:00'), datetime64('2014-12-12T14:14:00')]
# convert to time relative to GPS epoch
abs_times = [time - datetime64('1990-01-01T00:00') for time in abs_times]
# convert to number of seconds
abs_times = [float(time / timedelta64(1, 's')) for time in abs_times]
filter_abs = create_table_workspace('custom_absolute', [('float', 'start'), ('float', 'stop'), ('str', 'target')])
filter_abs.addRow((abs_times[0], abs_times[1], '0'))
filter_abs.addRow((abs_times[1], abs_times[2], '1'))
FilterEvents(InputWorkspace='PG3_21638', SplitterWorkspace=filter_abs,
GroupWorkspaces=True, OutputWorkspaceBaseName='absolute', RelativeTime=False)
Be warned that specifying RelativeTime=True
with a table full of
absolute times will almost certainly generate output workspaces
without any events in them.
Category: Concepts