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[ yes! ] I agree to abide by pyOpenSci's Code of Conduct during the review process and in maintaining my package after should it be accepted.
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Description
The classes are time-and-the-sky functions for planning and carrying out ground-based astronomical observations, based on astropy.coordinates and astropy.time, with a few end-runs to speed things up. There is also a Tkl/TK program similar to JSkyCalc for interactive use. The functions are also useful for data processing for such tasks as, inferring barycentric corrections from image header data.
Community Partnerships
We partner with communities to support peer review with an additional layer of
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Explain how and why the package falls under these categories (briefly, 1-2 sentences). For community partnerships, check also their specific guidelines as documented in the links above. Please note any areas you are unsure of:
This doesn't exactly fit any of the categories -- it's mostly useful to astronomers running telescopes to get data in the first place, and then useful later in filling in the time-and-the-sky context for observations.
Who is the target audience and what are the scientific applications of this package?
The target audience is observational astronomers who need to plan observations around the constraints imposed by their earthbound platform. It is also useful in processing and checking data from telescopes. It's also something of a primitive 'desktop planetarium', which is userful in many contexts.
Are there other Python packages that accomplish similar things? If so, how does yours differ?
astroplan seems to have some similar capabilities, but the present package has a more developed front-end and may have a more intuitive class structure.
Any other questions or issues we should be aware of:
I developed this for my own use based on something like 1000 nights of large-telescope operation, but I did not train as a programmer. I would need to write some tutorials, package it better, and so on -- if this is accepted, hopefully I can find others to offer guidance on that.
P.S. Have feedback/comments about our review process? Leave a comment here
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Submitting Author: Name
jrthorstensen
Package Name:
thorsky
One-Line Description of Package:
astropy-based time-and-the-sky software for astronomical observations and reduction
Repository Link (if existing):
https://github.com/jrthorstensen/thorsky
EiC: TBD
Code of Conduct & Commitment to Maintain Package
Description
The classes are time-and-the-sky functions for planning and carrying out ground-based astronomical observations, based on astropy.coordinates and astropy.time, with a few end-runs to speed things up. There is also a Tkl/TK program similar to JSkyCalc for interactive use. The functions are also useful for data processing for such tasks as, inferring barycentric corrections from image header data.
Community Partnerships
We partner with communities to support peer review with an additional layer of
checks that satisfy community requirements. If your package fits into an
existing community please check below:
Scope
Please indicate which category or categories this package falls under:
Domain Specific
This doesn't exactly fit any of the categories -- it's mostly useful to astronomers running telescopes to get data in the first place, and then useful later in filling in the time-and-the-sky context for observations.
Who is the target audience and what are the scientific applications of this package?
The target audience is observational astronomers who need to plan observations around the constraints imposed by their earthbound platform. It is also useful in processing and checking data from telescopes. It's also something of a primitive 'desktop planetarium', which is userful in many contexts.
Are there other Python packages that accomplish similar things? If so, how does yours differ?
astroplan seems to have some similar capabilities, but the present package has a more developed front-end and may have a more intuitive class structure.
Any other questions or issues we should be aware of:
I developed this for my own use based on something like 1000 nights of large-telescope operation, but I did not train as a programmer. I would need to write some tutorials, package it better, and so on -- if this is accepted, hopefully I can find others to offer guidance on that.
P.S. Have feedback/comments about our review process? Leave a comment here
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: