Observational Astronomy (308)
These notes are brief summaries and links for the in-class content for the Monday class meetings of the Fall Semester 2019.
Week 1 (August 19)
- Orientation to the class
 - Purpose, activities, outcomes
 - Visiting the observatory
 - Remote observing
 - Semester projects
 - Facilities and research
 - On-line with Mt. Kent live session
 
Week 2 (August 26)
- What we observe
- Position and celestial coordinates
 - Flux and magnitude
 
 - What we infer
- Distance
 - Size
 - Luminosity
 - Composition
 - Evolution
 
 - Useful tools for access to data
 
Week 3 (September 2)
- Labor Day holiday
 
Week 4 (September 9)
- Telescopes
- Basic concepts of optical telescope design
 - Light gathering function
 - Focal plane scale
 - Angular resolution and point spread function
 - Detectors and filters
 
 
- Visit to the Planetarium
- Solar projection telescope
 - Solar imaging in hydrogen alpha light
 
 
Week 5 (September 16)
- Telescopes continued from last week as needed
 
- Examples: Epsilon Lyrae (Double Double) see https://www.astro.louisville.edu/shared_skies/archive/select/stars/lyra/epsilon_lyrae/20060909/
 
Week 6 (September 23)
- Clear weather tonight possible (Monday) and the coming weekend
 
- Roundtable discussion about project ideas (bring your own) such as
- Jupiter imaging (must be done soon)
 - Bright star photometry (examples are some TESS candidates and zeta Andromedae now)
 - Use of latest CMOS color sensors for photometry
 - Other TESS candidates (TESS is currently observing the northern sky)
 - Variable stars in the TESS public data
 - Comets http://www.aerith.net/comet/weekly/current.html
 - Supernovae http://www.rochesterastronomy.org/supernova.html
 - Anything in Orion (visible after midnight now)
 - Geosynchronous (GEO) satellites (where, when, optical variability)
 - Low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites (wide field camera, untracked)
 - Near-Earth objects
 - Mercury transit on November 11 (with an exoplanet transit at night backup)
 - Other selected targets in either hemisphere, your choice
 
 
To continue this week and next as time allows
- AstroImageJ
- Installation
 - Use with simple images
 - Photometry
 - Advanced concepts
 - Examples: Jupiter see https://www.astro.louisville.edu/shared_skies/archive/select/planets/jupiter/20140313/
 - Examples: TESS data and followup with ground-based observations
 
 
Week 7 (September 30)
- Continued discussion of research and optical astronomy data
 
Week 8 (October 7)
- Fall break
 
Week 9 (October 14)
- Final organization of research topics (revised 2019-10-21)
- Natalie Warning - Geosynchronous satellites
 - Shawn Knabel, Dominic Smith, Travis Waters - TESS exoplanets
 - Michael Turner - TESS and expolanets
 - Christopher Anderson - Orion star formation
 - Benjamin Kantardzic- TESS and exoplanets
 - Dylan Scharff - Supernovae
 
 
- Exoplanet transit photometry of a TESS candidate
- Full frame images
 - Candidates
 - Validation - night of October 13, 2019
 
 
Week 10 (October 21)
- Research by topic
- TESS and exoplanets
- Travis Waters, Shawn Knabel, Dominic Smith, Michael Turner, Ben Kantardzic
 
 - Supernovae
- Dylan Scharff
 
 - Orion star formation
- Chris Andersen
 
 - Geosynchronous satellites
- Natalie Warning
 
 
 - TESS and exoplanets
 
- This week at Moore Observatory
- Tuesday night likely clear
 - Wednesday night long range partly cloudy
 - Sunday night long range favorable
 
 
- Noise in signals
- Gaussian random processes, photons, and Poisson noise
 - Assessing sources of systematic error and noise in photometry
 
 
Week 11 (October 28)
- Stellar spectra
 - Radial velocities