Welcome to the GSFC Exoplanet Modeling and Analysis Center (EMAC)

EMAC serves as a catalog, repository and integration platform for modeling and analysis resources focused on the study of exoplanet characteristics and environments. EMAC is a key project of the GSFC Sellers Exoplanet Environments Collaboration (SEEC).

If you've used EMAC in any part of your research, please cite our RNAAS paper either in your methods section or in the "Software used" portion of any manuscripts; see the FAQ for more information.

More Information on EMAC for first-time visitors...

If you make use of tools linked or hosted on EMAC: please use the following statement in your publication acknowledgements: “This research made use of the NASA Exoplanet Modeling and Analysis Center (EMAC), which is funded by the NASA Planetary Science Division’s Internal Scientist Funding Model.”

Stay up to date with EMAC!
  • Subscribe to our monthly RSS messages on new updates and tools
  • Check out the Twitter account @ExoplanetModels (not an official NASA account), where new tools and features are highlighted
Help us improve EMAC!
  • Email us with general feedback at and tell us what you’d change or improve.
  • Click the icon in a resource box to provide suggestions for an individual tool or tools.
Other EMAC info!
  • EMAC is intended as a clearinghouse for the whole research community interested in exoplanets, where any software or model developer can submit their tool/model or their model output as a contribution for others to use.
  • EMAC provides a searchable and sortable database for available source code and data output files - both resources hosted locally by EMAC as well as existing external tools and repositories hosted elsewhere.
  • The EMAC team also helps develop new web interfaces for tools that can be run “on-demand” or model grids that can be interpolated for more individualized results.
  • If you would like to submit a new tool/model to EMAC, please visit our Submit a Resource page.
  • For help with tutorials for select resources/tools use the “Demo” buttons below and subscribe to our YouTube channel.
  • Watch this video for a walk-through of the whole EMAC site, including how to submit a new tool and how to access information for each resource.

The P.I. is Avi Mandell, and the Deputy P.I. is Eric Lopez; more information on EMAC staffing and organization can be found on Our Team page.

AAS - Timeseries: Read in and Manipulate Time Series in Astropy

Thomas Robitaille, American Astronomical Society (AAS)

EMAC: 2207-110 EMAC 2207-110
copy_img
https://emac.gsfc.nasa.gov?cid=2207-110

The aas-timeseries package has been developed as part of a project between AAS Publishing and the Astropy Project. The goal of this project is to provide astronomers with all the tools needed to make it possible for astronomers to use Astropy to read in and manipulate time series data sets, such as exoplanet transit light curves, produce interactive figures, and easily embed these in a paper. The package is general enough to be usable in other contexts, for example to embed interactive time series figures in personal web pages, or for use in Jupyter notebooks and Jupyter Lab.

Last updated: Nov. 25, 2020

Code Language(s): Python3

AAS - Timeseries: Read in and Manipulate Time Series in Astropy

Thomas Robitaille, American Astronomical Society (AAS)

copy_img
https://emac.gsfc.nasa.gov?cid=2207-110
2207-110

The aas-timeseries package has been developed as part of a project between AAS Publishing and the Astropy Project. The goal of this project is to provide astronomers with all the tools needed to make it possible for astronomers to use Astropy to read in and manipulate time series data sets, such as exoplanet transit light curves, produce interactive figures, and easily embed these in a paper. The package is general enough to be usable in other contexts, for example to embed interactive time series figures in personal web pages, or for use in Jupyter notebooks and Jupyter Lab.

About Demo