Introduction
Introduction
Astrophysical Techniques
Jonathan Williams
[email protected]
C-209
http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/users/jpw/classes/techniques/
Who am I?
- born in England a long time ago
- 1988 BA mathematics @ Cambridge
- 1995 PhD astronomy @ Berkeley (molecular clouds, star formation)
- Postdocs, faculty jobs in MA/AZ/FL
- joined faculty at UH in 2002 (my 6th university)
- Became a US citizen in 2005 (after F, J, H visas, green card… total of 17 years)
- Research interests: protoplanetary disks; planet formation; submillimeter
interferometry and some IR imaging
- Non-research interests: sailing and scouts (currently); travel and basketball (t < 35y)
This summer, I went to a conference in Sweden, fished in Alaska and explored the
Pacific NW with my family, and worked on an ISM textbook.
In 10 years time, I hope I’m still getting invited to meetings and we have many more
unambiguous signatures of protoplanets in disks.
Who are you?
• Introduce yourselves
- Expand upon an area in the book or go beyond (but check with me first). E.g.,
- Details about a telescope / instrument
- Specifics of a data reduction package
- Sophisticated analysis techniques such as machine learning
- Provide a short handout to distribute two days before class, i.e., Mon or Wed
- This is a chance for you to delve deeper into an area of particular interest to you
- No need to decide right away, but two must be done by the end of the semester
for full credit
Grading
• 60% on problem sets
- Generally assigned every 1-2 weeks and due 1-2 weeks later
- Hand in by the start of class on due date
- Hard deadlines (like telescopes, grants, etc): 50% off if
handed in by start of next class, no credit after that
No final exam and no curve. If you get maximum grades on problem sets but
do not show up, you’ll get a B. If you get the maximum for class participation
but don’t do any problem sets, you’ll get a C.
Necessities
• Course book
• Computer access
- There will be coding assignments
- Use either IfA computers (e.g., galileo) or personal laptop
- I recommend you code in python and use the jupyter notebook
- If you don’t know coding (& python) yet, get up to speed asap.
You will need it well beyond this class!
Resources
• These and future slides will be posted at the course website
• Course book and other useful books on hold at library
• jupyter.org, stackoverflow.com, older students, other faculty
• Office hours
- After class (but not before…)
- By appointment or just drop by and see if I’m in C-209
Along with the telescopes, the best perk of being a grad student at the IfA is
that you can literally walk into the office of an expert in almost any field. The
most successful students talk to many faculty, not just their advisor!
Preface
t ~ 100 years