I would suggest to have a double-check of the bins.dat file. The highest number in this file correspond to the total number of kinematic bins.
Usually, this should be the case. However, Julia and I recently noticed a problem, when the kinematics were derived with IDL. In that bins.dat file the highest number was #bins+1 . It took us 2 hours to find the problem, because DYNAMITE did not provide a good error.
This is just a check to help people finding who create their kinematics with IDL :)
I would suggest to have a double-check of the bins.dat file. The highest number in this file correspond to the total number of kinematic bins.
Usually, this should be the case. However, Julia and I recently noticed a problem, when the kinematics were derived with IDL. In that bins.dat file the highest number was #bins+1 . It took us 2 hours to find the problem, because DYNAMITE did not provide a good error.
This is just a check to help people finding who create their kinematics with IDL :)