poliastro - Utilities and Python wrappers for Orbital Mechanics
Project description
Overview
- Name:
poliastro
- Website:
- Author:
Juan Luis Cano <juanlu001@gmail.com>
- Version:
0.1.1
These are some Python wrappers to Fortran and MATLAB subroutines useful in Orbital Mechanics, such as orbit propagation, solution of the Lambert’s problem, conversion between position and velocity vectors and classical orbital elements and orbit plotting.
Fortran subroutines
The core of poliastro is possible thanks to several Fortran subroutines, written by David A. Vallado for his book “Fundamentals of Astrodynamics and Applications” and available on the Internet as the companion software of the book.
The author explicitly gave permission to redistribute these subroutines in this project under the current license.
Some of them were slightly modified due to errors in the build process, the handling of relative errors in comparisons and to make them more suitable to use with different gravitational parameters.
Requirements
poliastro requires NumPy and SciPy and is usually tested in these environments:
Linux 64-bit
Python 3.3
NumPy 1.7.1
SciPy 0.12.0
oct2py 0.4.0 (optional, for numerical computation of bodies ephemerides)
Besides, a Fortran compiler is needed to build the extensions. poliastro is usually built with gfortran.
There is no reason it shouldn’t work under Windows or Mac OS X with properly configured tools (not tested).
Python 2 compatibility might be accomplished with little syntax changes using 3to2.
Installation
To install poliastro from source, just type:
$ python setup.py install
This might require superuser privileges. To install in a local directory:
$ python setup.py install --user
Installations through PyPI are also supported:
$ pip install poliastro --user
It is recommended that you never ever use sudo with distutils, pip, setuptools and friends in Linux because you might seriously break your system [1][2][3][4]. Apart from per user directories, other options are using virtualenv or local installations.
Testing
If installed correctly, this should work:
$ python -c "import poliastro; poliastro.test()" Running unit tests for poliastro [...] OK $
Bug reporting
I am one of those that writes bug-free code every single time, but if you think you’ve found one please refer to the issue tracker on GitHub.
Citing
If you use scikit-aero on your project, please drop me a line.
License
poliastro is released under a 2-clause BSD license, hence allowing commercial use of the library. Please refer to the COPYING file.
TODO
These tasks are in my checklist:
Test in Windows
Look for better ephemeris
Expand constants module
Investigate astropy integration
Add examples
FAQ
Does it work on Windows?
I had some problems to find a free Fortran compiler for Windows 64-bit (but I am not alone). And probably configuring the paths to make oct2py and Octave work will be a pain too.
Have you considered choosing another operative system?
What’s up with the name?
poliastro comes from Polimi, which is the shortened name of the Politecnico di Milano, the Italian university where I’ve been studying while writing this software. It’s my tiny tribute to a place I’ve come to love. Grazie mille!
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