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=== Other Astronomy software not in Ubuntu ===
 
=== Other Astronomy software not in Ubuntu ===
 
=== Links ===
 
=== Links ===
* UbuntuScience
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* [[UbuntuHelp:UbuntuScience|UbuntuScience]]
 
* [http://wiki.debian.org/DebianScienceAstronomy Debian Science and Astronomy]
 
* [http://wiki.debian.org/DebianScienceAstronomy Debian Science and Astronomy]
 
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2007年12月4日 (二) 11:29的版本

Ubuntu Astronomy Packages

Ubuntu Linux includes many packages useful for astronomy and astrophysics.

Celestia

A real-time visual space simulation Choose a point within the Local Group of galaxies, and Celestia will show you an approximation of how it would appear to your eyes were you actually there. Orbit a couple kilometers above the surface of a tiny, irregular asteroid, then head off towards Jupiter, watching it grow from a bright point of light into a looming sphere filling your field of vision. Leave our solar system entirely and observe the sun as it fades from a brilliant disk to a bright star, disappearing almost entirely as you head off toward the Upsilon Andromeda system to orbit around its innermost giant planet. Celestia is available with a range of front-ends Homepage User Guide Package Information

Fv

A tool for viewing and editing FITS-format files Fv provides a graphical user interface to data stored in FITS (Flexible Image Transport System) files. Local files can be created, viewed and edited, files on the internet can be opened read-only through the http and ftp protocols. Through the POWplot program, FITS data can be visualized in a large variety of styles. An interface to the Sky-View online database allows for searching, downloading, and plotting of images and object lists for a region of the sky. FITS support is also available through The GIMP Homepage User Guide Package Information

GCX

Astronomical image processing and photometry Gcx is an astronomical image processing and data reduction tool, with an easy to use graphical user interface. It provides a complete set of data reduction functions for CCD photometry, with frame WCS fitting, automatic star identification, aperture photometry of target and standard stars, single-frame ensemble photometry solution finding, multi-frame color coefficient fitting, extinction coefficient fitting, and all-sky photometry; as well as general-purpose astronomical image processing functions (bias, dark, flat, frame alignment and stacking); It can function as a FITS viewer. The program can control CCD cameras and telescopes, and implement automatic observation scripting. Cameras are controlled through a hardware-specific server, to which gcx connects through a TCP socket. It generates FITS files with comprehensive header information. Homepage User Manual Package Information

IFRIT

A powerful tool for visualizing 3-dimensional data sets IFRIT (the Ionization FRont Interactive Tool) has its origins (and hence name) in a specialized utility designed to visualize ionization fronts in cosmological numerical simulations. IFRIT, however, has outgrown its origins and now can visualize general data sets as well. Homepage Example Animations Package Information

KStars

A desktop planetarium application KStars is a graphical desktop planetarium for KDE. It depicts an accurate simulation of the night sky, including stars, constellations, star clusters, nebulae, galaxies, all planets, the Sun, the Moon, comets and asteroids. You can see the sky as it appears from any location on Earth, on any date. The user interface is highly intuitive and flexible. The display can be panned and zoomed with the mouse, and you can easily identify objects and track their motion across the sky. KStars includes many powerful features, yet the interface is clean and simple and fun to use. Homepage User Handbook Package Information

Unofficial Astronomy packages

Other Astronomy software not in Ubuntu

Links