Source: cpl-plugin-hawki Section: science Priority: optional Maintainer: Debian Astronomy Maintainers Uploaders: Ole Streicher Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 11), libcpl-dev (>= 5.3.1), libgsl-dev, pkg-config, python3, python3-astropy, python3-cpl, python3-sphinx Standards-Version: 4.2.0 Homepage: https://www.eso.org/sci/software/pipelines/hawki Vcs-Git: https://salsa.debian.org/debian-astro-team/cpl-plugin-hawki.git Vcs-Browser: https://salsa.debian.org/debian-astro-team/cpl-plugin-hawki Package: cpl-plugin-hawki Architecture: any Depends: ${misc:Depends}, ${shlibs:Depends} Recommends: esorex|python3-cpl Suggests: cpl-plugin-hawki-calib (= ${binary:Version}), cpl-plugin-hawki-doc Multi-Arch: same Description: ESO data reduction pipeline for the HAWK-I instrument This is the data reduction pipeline for the HAWK-I instrument of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) from the European Southern Observatory (ESO). . HAWK-I is a near-infrared (0.85-2.5 μm ) wide-field imager. It is being offered for the first time in Period 81. The instrument is cryogenic (120 K, detectors at 80 K) and has a full reflective design. The light passes four mirrors and two filter wheels before hitting a mosaic of four Hawaii 2RG 2048 * 2048 pixels detectors. The final F-ratio is F/4.36 ( 1 arcsec on the sky corresponds to 169 μm on the detector). Package: cpl-plugin-hawki-doc Architecture: all Multi-Arch: foreign Depends: ${misc:Depends} Section: doc Description: ESO data reduction pipeline documentation for HAWK-I This package contains the HTML documentation and manpages for the data reduction pipeline for the HAWK-I instrument of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) from the European Southern Observatory (ESO). Package: cpl-plugin-hawki-calib Architecture: all Multi-Arch: foreign Depends: ${misc:Depends}, cpl-plugin-hawki, wget Description: ESO data reduction pipeline calibration data downloader for HAWK-I This package downloads calibration data of the data reduction pipeline for the HAWK-I instrument of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) from the European Southern Observatory (ESO).