Durham uni ppl has received the following awards and nominations. Way to go!
Our team developed an exoplanet visualisation tool to emphasize the important of exoplanets and their properties, and to create an intuitive interface for investigating these. This took the form of a Python program where the user can interact with a full-sky image to view data on each exoplanet, as well as seeing their distribution. We decided to include the name, mass, radius and distance of each exoplanet since these give a sense of the diverse range that planets can take, with many being larger than Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system. We also created a simple website with general information for amateur astronomers and embedded an image of the sky featuring all the exoplanets in the dataset.
As a team of physics students, we are all interested in astrophysics and its presentation to the wider public. One of our members is about to undertake a year-long project on exoplanets and so we decided to focus on them. We undertook simple web development to create a front-end interface and back-end hosting service (programmed using HTML, CSS and Javascript via NodeJS) in parallel with a Python program. For the latter, we used scientific Python packages as well as data-plotting packages to help us process the dataset. Our plan was to use the package mpld3 to create a browser-compatible representation of our interactive program, but unfortunately this package does not support either 3D plots or elliptical projections of 3D data.
We used data from NASA's exoplanet archive as an integral part of our project since we plotted each exoplanet's position on the night sky as well as included extra information about the planet in our interactive visualisation.
https://exoplanetarchive.ipac.caltech.edu/
https://astronomy.com/magazine/ask-astro/2013/07/sky-coordinates
http://mpld3.github.io/
(nasa logo picture in beginning of video): https://www.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/5-8/features/symbols-of-nasa.html