I was very confused for too long, until I realized we werenβt talking about the author of possibly the highest-cited non-refereed paper in cosmology (arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph...).
I was very confused for too long, until I realized we werenβt talking about the author of possibly the highest-cited non-refereed paper in cosmology (arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph...).
Actually it was almost completely clouded, but there was a small hole I the clouds I tried to take advantage of, but failed.
Luckily they didnβt question what I was doing with a telescoping a cloudy evening π
Four police officers came to my building because a person had been spotted with a suspicious instrument.
It was me and my telescope, trying to image C/2025 Lemmon.
I surrendered unconditionally.
PlanetmΓ¦ssigt kommer Saturn og Neptun op tidligt. Neptun krΓ¦ver dog en kikkert, men stΓ₯r lige ved siden af Saturn
Jupiter og Venus som bliver flottest, ogsΓ₯ lige ved siden af hinanden (1Β°), stΓ₯r op ca. 2:30.
Punktet hvorfra meteorerne kommer (βradiantenβ) stiger hΓΈjere op pΓ₯ himlen i lΓΈbet af natten, sΓ₯ flere stjerneskud ud pΓ₯ morgenen. PΓ₯ den anden side kommer en nΓ¦sten fuld MΓ₯ne ogsΓ₯ lΓ¦ngere op og spolerer det lidt.
SΓ₯ stjerneskudsmΓ¦ssigt ville jeg gΓ₯ efter det mest skyfri tidspunkt.
Behold the homemade 1.9 m radio telescope, built by DAWNers Gaurav, Kaj, Jiazhe, and Omarπ‘
The telescope received its first light last week, where the team was able to observe neutral hydrogen in the Milky Way from the institute's backyard.
cosmicdawn.dk/news/first-l...
@dg.dk
I like Lyman Ξ± for many reasons, including its ability to probe reionization:
In an extensive study on galaxy evolution through cosmic time, Marko Shuntov presents a plethora of interesting result, including how the total mass of the galaxies' stars and dark matter are related?
π¬π§ cosmicdawn.dk/news/new-ins...
π©π° cosmicdawn.dk/news-in-dani...
@dg.dk
Amazing! I love how the long exposure lets you see the starsβ temperatures π€©
Fair point :)
Right, if you're aiming to illustrate peak wavelength it makes sense. I just meant that O stars don't look purple to the human eye, so *personally* I would prefer a Planckian locus color scheme :)
Nice! Is that all 1Β½ billion stars (or how many the full sample is)?
One comment: Personally I prefer HR diagram with "real" colors, i.e. how it would look to the human eye. Blackbodies tend to be red below a few 10Β³, white at Tβ, and saturate at a pale blue above ~10β΄ K. And never green or violet.
I just came back from TromsΓΈ where I saw this. It was absolutely amazing π€© Flickering and shimmering around us. Even the red colors were visible to the naked eye!
More like STONEDWACK (aSTrONomErs Don't understand hoW ACronyms worK).
β¦then proceeds to hit the Klein bottle.
Ha ha ha I was somewhat confused π
Jeg fik engang at vide, at jeg var tabt bag af en vognβ¦
You might be consistent, but youβre incomplete. Unrecoverably sick π₯
With four kids, they need all the support they can get π
I think I have four different Dinosaur Comic T-shirts :)
I love them! Butβ¦ has it really been 20 yearsβ¦ π¬π«
I just turned oldβ¦
3/3
I describe how astrophysics is hard because of the huge span of timescales, but easy because of the huge span of timescales.
There's also an account of the first ~half year of galaxy observations with James Webb.
And lots of illustrative figures that you can use in your talksππ½
2/3
Context:
The article is a chapter in a multidisciplinary anthology, "Multiplicity of Time Scales in Complex Systems", aimed at non-astronomer scientists, but may also be fun for astro-students.
And "island" is also a hat-tip to "island universes"β¦π
1/3
I wrote my first single-author article, and I'm proud to say the a reference to Jon Bon Jovi
made it through peer review π
arxiv.org/abs/2309.02486
2/3
Context:
The article is a chapter in a multidisciplinary anthology, "Multiplicity of Time Scales in Complex Systems", aimed at non-astronomer scientists, but may also be fun for astro-students.
And "island" is also a hat-tip to "island universes"β¦π
I describe how astrophysics is hard because of the huge span of timescales, but easy because of the huge span of timescales.
There's also an account of the first ~half year of galaxy observations with James Webb.
And lots of illustrative figures that you can use in your talksππ½
Context:
The article is a chapter in a multidisciplinary anthology, "Multiplicity of Time Scales in Complex Systems", aimed at non-astronomer scientists, but may also be fun for astro-students.
And "island" is also a hat-tip to "island universes"β¦π
Never had one until I got this recently :)
Agree!
Thanks, I needed this π