RGBA to FTS Converter

Transform RGBA into FTS images quickly online

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Nothing to Install

The converter lives in your browser — just navigate, upload RGBA, select FTS, and grab the result. No desktop app needed.

Rapid Conversion

Processing RGBA to FTS is swift — most conversions finish in moments, so you spend less time waiting and more time working.

Cross-Platform

Whether you are on Windows, macOS, Linux, or mobile — Convertio's RGBA to FTS converter works in every modern browser.

How to convert RGBA to FTS

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose fts or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your fts file right afterwards

About formats

RGBA is a raw (headerless) image format that extends the RGB color model with a fourth channel for alpha transparency. Each pixel is stored as four consecutive sample values — red, green, blue, and alpha — written sequentially in scanline order with no container structure, headers, or compression. The alpha channel specifies opacity for each pixel independently: a maximum value means fully opaque, zero means fully transparent, and intermediate values produce semi-transparency. Like its three-channel counterpart, RGBA files require the image dimensions and bit depth to be specified externally since the raw data stream contains no metadata. The format supports 8-bit (four bytes per pixel, 32-bit total), 16-bit, and floating-point channel depths. In compositing workflows, the alpha channel enables layering operations where foreground elements are blended over backgrounds according to their per-pixel opacity — the mathematical foundation for all modern image compositing, described by Porter and Duff in their seminal 1984 paper on digital compositing. One advantage is direct framebuffer compatibility: modern GPU hardware natively processes 32-bit RGBA pixels, so raw RGBA data can be uploaded to texture memory or written from render targets without any format conversion, critical for real-time graphics applications and game engines. The format's simplicity in representing transparent images provides another practical benefit — scientific visualization, medical imaging, and overlay rendering can produce raw RGBA output that any downstream tool can consume without needing a common container format. RGBA files are handled by ImageMagick, FFmpeg, and various graphics and compositing tools.
Initial release: 1990
FTS is a file extension for the Flexible Image Transport System (FITS), the standard data format used in astronomy since 1981 when it was defined by Don Wells, Eric Greisen, and R.H. Harten at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, and subsequently endorsed by the International Astronomical Union in 1982. FITS was designed from the outset as a self-describing archival format: each file begins with one or more 2880-byte header blocks containing ASCII keyword-value pairs that describe the data's dimensions, coordinate system, observation parameters, and provenance, followed by data blocks in a variety of numeric types — 8/16/32/64-bit integers and 32/64-bit IEEE floating-point values. FITS supports multi-dimensional arrays (images, data cubes, hypercubes), binary tables for catalog data, and ASCII tables, with multiple Header/Data Units (HDUs) that can coexist in a single file. The format handles specialized astronomical data: spectral cubes, radio interferometry visibilities, multi-extension mosaic images from CCD arrays, and time-series photometry. One advantage is scientific rigor: FITS mandates that all metadata needed to interpret the data physically — coordinate transformations (WCS), photometric calibration, telescope and instrument parameters — travels with the file, eliminating the metadata-loss problem that plagues general-purpose image formats in scientific contexts. The format's longevity and institutional backing is another strength — virtually every observatory, space telescope (Hubble, James Webb, Chandra), and astronomical software package (DS9, IRAF, Astropy) uses FITS as its primary data format.
Developer: NASA / IAU
Initial release: 1981

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RGBA to FTS?

Since RGBA has no file structure, most viewers reject it. FTS conversion adds the necessary format structure for universal compatibility.

What programs open FTS files?

FTS files can be opened in SAOImage DS9, FITS Liberator, Aladin, and astronomical data analysis tools.

Is my RGBA data safe during conversion?

Yes — uploaded data is processed securely and deleted immediately after conversion. Output files are removed from servers within 24 hours.

Is batch RGBA to FTS conversion possible?

Yes, Convertio lets you upload multiple RGBA inputs at once. All of them are converted to FTS in parallel, speeding up your workflow.

Is the conversion process fast?

Yes — RGBA to FTS conversion on Convertio usually completes in seconds. Cloud-based processing handles the work without taxing your device.

What makes FTS a good target format?

FTS offers scientific data format, astronomy standard, metadata-rich. It gives your raw RGBA data a proper structure that any image viewer or editor can handle.