Dec 7:
Homework extension: Homework number 13 will be due on Friday 5pm.
See the important email I sent out about problems with "ft1.o" and hints
on how to compute the power.
Nov 30:
(1) It is vital that you read Ch 12.0-12.1, the source
code "four1", and the figure showing the input/output array structure for
FFTs in Numerical Recipes. Also read Ch 13.0, and the first part of
13.4. Both of these chapters provide an outstanding introduction to
FTs and power spectra.
(2) In case it wasn't obvious, the motivation for giving the 5-minute
talks
in class is that being able to give a good talk is crucial for
success. It is a required skill for scientists and teachers. Like
anything else, the only way to become proficient at giving talks is to
practice, practice, practice. The "practice" should be as realistic as
possible - you need folks in the audience who know more than you do and
will ask hard questions - that's practice! Lecturing to undergrads and
the public does not help much - it is not the same.
Nov 17
Dr. Welsh will resume lecturing on Monday Nov 22. You will get a new
homework assignment on that day. Remember that your class presentations
will be coming up soon - perhaps Wed Nov 24.
In case there was any doubt, there definitely will be questions on the
final exam written and graded by Dr. Eztel.
Nov 4
There's a slight conflict in times for next week's Friday class with
Dr. Etzel: 2pm is also when the Scholarship award ceremony takes place.
So the class and Dr. Etzel will have to come up with a new plan.
In any case, there will be no Astr 680 class on Monday Nov 15th.
Nov 3
Note the due date: Homework assigned on Wed Nov 3 is due on Wed Nov
10.
Reminder: The word "data" is plural! Likewise for "spectra".
Nothing says "I'm an amateur!" more than misusing these words.
Useful Reading:
For spectroscopy, the "User's Guide to Reducing Slit Spectra with
IRAF" will be very helpful. I highly recommend you read it, at least the
first few sections. Also, the StarLink guide "Simple Spectroscopic
Reductions" is very useful, especially sections 1-4 (the rest of the
document is specific to Starlink software). The Starlink documents are hung
off our class website. The IRAF documents are available at the usual IRAF
site.
For photometry, the IRAF guides to "apphot" and "daophot" are
verbose but essential. Apphot is simpler and easier, so you may want to
start there. However, DAOphot is much more powerful (for crowded fields,
such as globular clusters), and can do everything apphot can do and more.
Either way, get familiar with the material in these guides.
Oct 25
Midterm exam on Wed Nov 3rd, usual class time. Closed-book exam (no
notes), but calculators allowed. A suggested exam-taking strategy:
a) answers the questions you know first - these are like money in the
bank.
b) do not spend too much time on questions that are not worth many
points.
c) don't attempt to write a "perfect" answer. Write down the majority of
the information and go for the next big catch of points. Don't spend
10 minutes getting the last 2% of a question correct. Go for the big
bucks, then move on. If you have time, you can go back and fill in
any gaps.
I presented two plotting packages in class, "PGPLOT" and "grace"
(xmgrace). There are many additional packages, e.g., "mongo" and
"SM", as well as graphics capability within non-graphics specific
software, e.g. IRAF, IDL, Matlab, NCAR, NAg, etc.. The point is that you
need to know how to plot/graph things so they look clean, accurate, and
professional. Whatever graphics package you choose, be sure you become
proficient. Take a look at a recent Astrophysical Journal paper to see
what the figures look like. Yours should match their quality from now on.
Oct 12:
Notes on signal-to-noise ratio.
We are halfway through the homework assignments and to date the class
average on the first 6 assignments is 43.8/50.0; this is good.
A rough threshold for what I consider to be unacceptable quality work is
an average below 40.
Oct 11:
1) If there are any objections to postponing the midterm exam by a week,
please let me know. Right now, the midterm exam is scheduled for Wednesday
October 27.
2) Regarding the AAS "class project" poster paper: This is a voluntary
thing and will be treated totally independent of the Astr 680 class in
terms of lectures, homework, exams, and grades. So we should not call it
a ``class project'' since it is not - it is an extracurricular activity.
If folks are interested, we can choose a time to meet and work on TrES-1.
Friday afternoon when there is no colloquium is a good possibility. Even
weekends are possible.
3) Here's a comment on the first question for homework #6.
If you haven't already guessed, this has to do with the famous
"Central Limit Theorem". Essentially the central limit theorem says that
the distribution of the means of *any* distribution of independent random
variables (with finite mean and variance) will asymptotically approach a
Gaussian. Think about this - any shape distribution will yield a Gaussian
if averages of samples are taken. Pretty amazing, huh?!
And that is the reason why the Gaussian or Normal distribution is so
ubiquitous. The homework asks you to use a uniform (flat) distribution.
But if you have the time, try it with any distribution. Or, do a search on
the web - there are many really nice java and javascript-based animations
showing the effect.
Just about any good mathematics textbook will have some mention of the
central limit theorem. It is interesting, but do keep in mind that the
convergence to a Gaussian is both approximate and asymptotic.
This means that in some cases it will be close to, but not exactly a
Gaussian. The homework is an example of this. [WHY?]
And even in those cases where it does converge to a Gaussian, you
may need an infinite number of samples to actually get there.
Sep 26:
- Required class at MLO: Fri Oct 1, 4:00 pm to about
midnight. Hopefully we'll get done earlier, but it depends on
weather and how efficient we are.
- For MLO: Be sure to bring a notebook to take notes, both for the lecture
and the on-hands work at the telescope. Be absolutely sure to read the
MLO Handbook and User's Guide to Direct Imaging and CCD Photometry
with the MLO 40-Inch Reflector (2004 edition).
- BBQ plans: We need get buns & fixin's for the BBQ at MLO on Friday.
Dr. Etzel is donating the hamburgers. Let's make plans on Wed for what
we'll need and who might volunteer to get things.
Sep 22:
It is final: we'll meet at MLO on Friday Oct 1, as planned, rain or shine.
Meet at the visitors center at 4pm. We'll have a class for an hour or so,
then break for dinner, then meet again at the 40" telescope at about 6:45 pm.
We'll definitely be done by midnight. If it is really poor weather, there is
still plenty we can do, but we'll have to try again the next night.
Be sure to bring a late night snack and warm clothes: hat, scarf, etc., (but
you do not necessarily need wear them the whole time, unless you are
Carlos!). Check the MLO weather page to see how cold it has been getting at
night.
- No office hours on Wed Oct 6th.
Sep 20:
- Note on programming: Be sure to always test your code with simple cases
where you know the answer. This is a necessary part of writing code.
Get into the habit of doing this.
- Guest lecture by Dr. Bob Leach on Monday Sep 27 on the topic of CCDs.
Please review the material in Howell's book as prep for the lecture.
- I have yet to decide on a final date for the MLO class. I'd prefer
Saturday Oct 2, because Oct 1 is the transit of the newly discovered
extrasolar planet TrES-1. But it may still be Fri Oct 1. In any case, it
seems like a BBQ is a good plan for dinner.
- As some of you may have noticed, some versions of xfig
do not properly close the PostScript file they produce. For some unknown
reason, sometimes the very last line is missing. To fix this, so that you
can actually print something, add the command "showpage" to the very end of
the PostScript file. So for example, the last lines should look something
like this:
$F2psEnd
rs
showpage
Use the unix "tail" command to quickly look at the end of a file.
Sep 7:
Dr. Welsh will not have office hours on Friday (Sep 10) or next
Mon, Wed (Sep 13, 15) because he'll be at MLO.
Reminder: MLO BBQ on Sat.
Sep 3:
Note typo in HW#1 Q 4: The question should read "...uncertainty in
magnitude (sigma_m)", instead of the incorrect "(sigma_m / m)". This
typo has been corrected and the LaTeX and PostScript files revised.
Thanks to Tamara for pointing this out.
Sep 2:
For Questions 2,3 in HW #1, use the propagation of errors formula
at the end of Ch 3 in Bevington (see page 48).
Because of the upcoming holiday on Monday, the class is a bit off pace
and part of the homework is one class ahead of the lectures. My apologies.
Aug 31:
Errata/typos in textbooks (according to wfw):
Bevington & Robson:
- Eq. 1.10, 2nd line: limit in wrong place
- On page 196 (a bad page for the author!) the following errors:
- - - Eq. 11.7 : should be Gamma(n+1), not Gamma(n-1)
- - - Eq. 11.8: exponent should be (n+1/2)
- - - Eq. 11.10: should be lowercase p inside integral
Howell:
- Figure 2.1: In the bucket analogy, realize that each bucket is
slightly different, therefore holds slightly different amounts.
- Figure caption 3.6 (page 41): should be "inverse gain".
- Fig 5.2: In general, use many more sky pixels than this.
Aug 30:
Please try to attend the Department BBQ at MLO on Sat Sep 11.
We will use this opportunity to tour the facilities at MLO. In particular,
I'd like you to:
- see the dormitory room you'll be staying at when observing
- see the 40" telescope and control room
- get acquainted with operating the visitor's 21" telescope (for public viewing)
especially if your are a TA.
Remember to bring a flashlight and warm clothing!
Be careful of rocks and cows on Sunrise Highway....
We will have class at MLO on Friday Oct 1.
Meet at the Visitor's Center at 4:00 pm, rain or shine.
We will have a one hour lecture first, then break for dinner, then meet in
the 40" dome/control room at about 7:00pm. We should be finished by
midnight so do not plan to sleep at MLO.
If the weather is so bad we cannot open the dome, plan to meet again the
next night (Sat) at 7pm. Remember to bring a flashlight, warm clothing,
and dinner + snack. If you have a camera, that could be useful to bring.
General Comment on Programming:
The first few written homework assignments are purposely designed to be
easy to give you time to acclimate to SDSU and get up to speed in
scientific programming under the unix environment. Don't squander this
time! Use it to become fluent in a scientific programming language
(fortran is best).
Although programming is not astronomy, you can't do the latter without
the former, and that's why there is such emphasis on programming in this
course. A recent survey of graduate students echoed the sentiment: more
programming in Astr 680 was thought to be very important.
You need to be proficient in programming to do research in
astronomy. So if you aren't already a decent programmer, use this time
to become one.