Monday, December 31, 2012

2012 Recap

Another year gone. This one seemed to have flown by particularly fast (thanks to the arrival of Marten James Talles). Science results were not thin on the ground though. First paper from the NHEMESES survey (2012a), awarded more Herschel time for this survey, two nice results on dust lanes in edge-on galaxies (2012b and nearly submitted). 2012ab accepted in the same week that Marten arrived. That was a good week.

Oh and the final thesis paper was accepted by Astronomische Nachrichten. No more frankenpaper!

The HI Quantified Morphology series is ticking along nicely. One more accepted in 2012, one more submitted. There may be one more in the Hopper but that remains to be seen. A QM paper for the S4G is in the works too. For more HI results I'll have to wait for the WALLABY and WNSHS surveys.

LADUMA still ticking along. It's a "potje" project. Keep lumping coals on the fire under the kettle and some substantial time later, something good will come of it.

I got to go observing with the WHT on La Palma! Small occulting galaxies. The Occulting galaxy catalog by Bill Keel was finally published which makes follow-up much easier. IFU observations, Hubble proposals etc etc. That project is looking brighter.

Yes 2012 looked pretty good. And the Hopper for 2013 publications is pretty full. Hopefully this will all translate into an astro-job someplace.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

La Palma Night 2

Last night started with a leisurely tutorial in ACAM use since it was so cloudy & all (could see Sirius...briefly...) and then it cleared up. Some. I started with the highest priority objects. Observing is mostly that. Strategize, plan, prioritize, accurately tell the telescope what to do.
In that way it reminds me of flight school. None of the particular tasks in the cockpit were that difficult. Each of them can be done easily. By a trained monkey. But you have to do *all* of them. In order. At the right time. Efficiently. And that is very much the case with observing as well.

Tonight is a good night. Clear, everything is working great (knock on wood) and I racked in the other Priority 1 objects (well most of them) in short order. Time to doubt my strategy. Should I expose longer? Are two filters enough? With three I can make RGB images. Always good...

And I messes up slightly, I queued a pair too early (meaning we observed it not when it was at its highest point in the sky but still climbing. Rectifying that now.
There is some high cloud coming in so I will slot my cirrus special: an extra exposure in each filter to make sure we get enough photons.

In the meantime, I have not been idle. The raw data from last night has been converted into B/W images (bias subtraction, flatfielding and stacking, nothing more fancy). It reacquainted me with IRAF and its quirks some...


Saturday, December 8, 2012

La Palma night 1

As part of the occulting galaxies project with Bill Keel, we've been asking for follow-up time on various mid-sized telescopes (3 to 4m mirror, a 2m will do in a pinch). The idea is to improve on the depth of the SDSS images these were so nicely identified in by the GalaxyZoo volunteers.

So this week I have a run of 5 dark (!) nights on the William Herschel Telescope on La Palma.
Flew in yesterday, crashed, met fun other astronomers, went up to the telescope, sat in on the ongoing night of observations, looked at the coming cloud cover (blerg is the official term I believe) and
crashed again.

Tonight is the first night of real observing for my run, even if that means I may be staring at clouds the whole time. Plan B is to finish plots and write-up for a bunch of papers to I will keep busy.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

The Andromeda Project


Thanks to the efforts of Bill Keel, I get to participate in the Andromeda Project, the latest in a series of astronomy citizen science efforts in which we-as-a-species find and classify objects on the sky.
It all started with the Galaxy ZOO project (currently in its 4th incarnation) which helped me and Bill find occulting galaxy pairs (more on that here).
This initial success hammered home for me the power of crowd source science, especially for astronomy.

And now we have

http://www.andromedaproject.org/

a new effort to find and size star clusters in our nearest neighbour galaxy, M31 aka Andromeda.
Thanks to the PHAT survey, there will be HST images for about 1/3 of that galaxy but to find
all the little clumps of stars, we will need a lot of eyeballs-on-data.

What can I contribute? Well back in the Pleistocene (ahem halcyon days of my PhD) I studied the number of background galaxies through foreground disks. I used that number to estimate the
dust content of the foreground spiral galaxy. But in this project. misclassification of a background object may well be the greatest contaminant to a clean cluster catalog. So the volunteers will be looking for these as well. Bill and me will be using these little galaxies to study the dust in M31.
I may have a go at using their number but the most interesting use will be to take a background galaxy (preferably an elliptical) and see if a dust structure from M31 is visible highlighted against the backdrop of the background galaxy.

During my PhD, I never thought there would be ever enough data on M31 to do any of this and then Julianne Dalcanton got the PHAT program approved. Super-excited to see several interests combine here: Hubble, citizen science, background galaxies, star clusters and dust.

So sign up! Help classify star clusters! Or keep playing Angry Birds...I know what I will do...