skyfield-data

Data package for Skyfield


Keywords
astronomy, science
License
MIT
Install
pip install skyfield-data==5.0.0

Documentation

Data files for Skyfield

Tests

Rationale

Skyfield is a Python library for astronomical computations. It depends on various data files to accurately compute moon phases, planet positions, etc.

Several issues are raised by these data files:

  • If they're not found in the path of the Loader, they're downloaded at runtime. Depending on the archive you're requesting, some files might be very large, causing a long delay (directly related to your network bandwidth). In the case of a web server app, you'd cause a timeout on client's end.
  • They come mainly from 2 sources: NASA's JPL, and the IERS. If one of them is temporarily unavailable, you couldn't perform any computation.
  • In some countries, or behind some filtering proxies, some hosts may be blocked.
  • These files have an expiration date (in a more or less distant future). As a consequence, even if the files are already downloaded in the right path, at each runtime you could possibly have to download one or more files before making any computation using them.

Currently known expiration dates

File Date
finals2000A.all 2024-06-16
de421.bsp 2053-10-08

Deprecation warning: As of python-skyfield>=1.31, Leap_Second.dat, deltat.data and deltat.preds files are not used anymore. They were not maintained anymore, and Brandon Rhodes switched to other source files for ∆T computations.

Goal for this project

  • Providing at least the most common of these assets in Python Package.
  • Make regular releases to refresh the files before they expire.
  • Provide a warning / logging mechanism when the files are about to expire (or when they are outdated) to still allow you to compute things with the loaded assets, but being informed you need to upgrade.

This way, you could install or upgrade this data package via pip.

Once all the files are on your disk space, you can instantiate your skyfield loader pointing at their path, without having to worry about anything.

Usage

Install the packages using:

pip install skyfield skyfield-data

To create a custom Skyfield loader, use the following code:

from skyfield_data import get_skyfield_data_path
from skyfield.api import Loader
load = Loader(get_skyfield_data_path())
planets = load('de421.bsp')  # this command won't download this file
ts = load.timescale(builtin=False)  # this command won't download the IERS file

For the record, using buitin=True as an argument to load the timescale data won't trigger the download of the file, because python-skyfield embeds its own data files as a built-in data source.

If you want to make sure that the data files would never be downloaded, you can also use the expire option like this:

load = Loader(get_skyfield_data_path(), expire=False)

Whenever a file contained in the catalog has expired, you're going to receive a warning when loading the skyfield-data path:

>>> from skyfield_data import get_skyfield_data_path
>>> from skyfield.api import Loader
>>> load = Loader(get_skyfield_data_path())
/home/[redacted]/skyfield_data/expirations.py:25: RuntimeWarning: The file de421.bsp has expired. Please upgrade your version of `skyfield-data` or expect computation errors
  RuntimeWarning

By default, the loading isn't blocked, but it's strongly recommended to upgrade to a more recent version, to make sure you're not going to make wrong astronomical computations.

Custom limit

By default, the RuntimeWarning is raised when the file has expired. You may want to be aware of this warning in advance, that is to say a few days or weeks before, in order to eventually upgrade your version of skyfield-data.

In order to trigger this warning, you can use the expiration_limit argument, like this:

>>> from skyfield_data import get_skyfield_data_path
>>> from skyfield.api import Loader
>>> load = Loader(get_skyfield_data_path(expiration_limit=30))
/home/[redacted]/skyfield_data/expirations.py:25: RuntimeWarning: The file de421.bsp would expire in less than 30 days. Please upgrade your version of `skyfield-data` or expect computation errors
  RuntimeWarning

Note: The expiration_limit argument should be a positive integer (or zero).

Developers

We assume that you'll be using a Python3.7+ version for all regular operations.

We're providing a Makefile with basic targets to play around with the toolkit. use make help to get more details.

In order to be able to run the download.py script, we recommend to run it from a virtualenv where you'd have installed the "dev" dependencies, using:

make install-dev

Python compatibility

Important: This project is, and should stay compatible with Python 2.6, 2.7 and Python 3.7+ up to 3.11, to keep the same Python compatibility that skyfield has.

Hacking

Improving or fixing skyfield-data will require you to have at least a virtualenv with tox installed on it.

We'll ask you to add tests along your patch, to make sure that no regression or bug would be introduced by your patch or further ones.

To make a quick'n'dirty test, inside your "tox-ready" virtualenv, run:

make test

to launch the Python 2.7 and Python 3.7+ test jobs.

If you want to test your branch against Python 2.6, you'll have to setup a Python 2.6-ready tox environment, by doing something similar to:

sudo apt install python2.6 python2.6-dev  # dev headers to compile numpy
mkvirtualenv TOX26 --python=`which python2.6`  # You will activate this venv with `workon TOX26`
pip install tox
tox -c tox-py26.ini

Known issues: on Ubuntu, you may be unable to build numpy at this point, due to misplaced C header files in your system. I've had hard times on Ubuntu, but your mileage may vary.

Note: At the moment, we can't prove that skyfield-data is 100% compatible with Python 2.6, because of a defunct CI. Although, we're pretty confident it is. Fingers crossed!

Online CI with Travis & Circle-CI

The online CI relies on Github Actions:

Tests

Copyright

Data files

  • de421.bsp is provided by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
  • finals2000A.all is provided by the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service.

Software

This Python Package code is published under the terms of the MIT license. See the COPYING file for more details.