The output of twoD_Gaussian
needs to be 1D. What you can do is add a .ravel()
onto the end of the last line, like this:
def twoD_Gaussian((x, y), amplitude, xo, yo, sigma_x, sigma_y, theta, offset):
xo = float(xo)
yo = float(yo)
a = (np.cos(theta)**2)/(2*sigma_x**2) + (np.sin(theta)**2)/(2*sigma_y**2)
b = -(np.sin(2*theta))/(4*sigma_x**2) + (np.sin(2*theta))/(4*sigma_y**2)
c = (np.sin(theta)**2)/(2*sigma_x**2) + (np.cos(theta)**2)/(2*sigma_y**2)
g = offset + amplitude*np.exp( - (a*((x-xo)**2) + 2*b*(x-xo)*(y-yo)
+ c*((y-yo)**2)))
return g.ravel()
You'll obviously need to reshape the output for plotting, e.g:
# Create x and y indices
x = np.linspace(0, 200, 201)
y = np.linspace(0, 200, 201)
x, y = np.meshgrid(x, y)
#create data
data = twoD_Gaussian((x, y), 3, 100, 100, 20, 40, 0, 10)
# plot twoD_Gaussian data generated above
plt.figure()
plt.imshow(data.reshape(201, 201))
plt.colorbar()
Do the fitting as before:
# add some noise to the data and try to fit the data generated beforehand
initial_guess = (3,100,100,20,40,0,10)
data_noisy = data + 0.2*np.random.normal(size=data.shape)
popt, pcov = opt.curve_fit(twoD_Gaussian, (x, y), data_noisy, p0=initial_guess)
And plot the results:
data_fitted = twoD_Gaussian((x, y), *popt)
fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 1)
ax.hold(True)
ax.imshow(data_noisy.reshape(201, 201), cmap=plt.cm.jet, origin='bottom',
extent=(x.min(), x.max(), y.min(), y.max()))
ax.contour(x, y, data_fitted.reshape(201, 201), 8, colors='w')
plt.show()