Search found 114 matches

by JeanTate
Mon Feb 05, 2018 8:51 pm
Forum: The Science Labs: Participate in Citizen Science or Smartphone Science
Topic: ZOOGEMS: Help pick the highest priority Zooniverse targets for Hubble!
Replies: 1
Views: 214467

Re: ZOOGEMS: Help pick the highest priority Zooniverse targets for Hubble!

Bill Keel, the astronomer who got this project up and running, wrote a nice long blog post about it, Gems of the Galaxy Zoos – help pick Hubble observations! https://blog.galaxyzoo.org/2018/02/02/gems-of-the-galaxy-zoos-help-pick-hubble-observations/ It includes nice explanations of the different ki...
by JeanTate
Tue Jan 21, 2014 4:06 pm
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Combining estimated errors (galaxy properties, of the observ
Replies: 1
Views: 17244

Re: Combining estimated errors (galaxy properties, of the ob

In a different thread, in this same section/board, Chris Peterson mentioned 'bounded errors', and said that there are clever ways to handle these.

That would seem to be pertinent to this, long dormant, thread too.

So I'm bumping it. :P
by JeanTate
Tue Jan 21, 2014 4:03 pm
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Does this effect have a name? If so, what is it?
Replies: 7
Views: 21691

Re: Does this effect have a name? If so, what is it?

Thanks everyone. :ssmile: There are clever ways of drawing error bars in cases like this (where the uncertainty in one direction would place the value outside of physical bounds). There are also analysis techniques for using these kinds of uncertainties in calculations, so they propagate correctly. ...
by JeanTate
Tue Jan 21, 2014 2:55 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Does this effect have a name? If so, what is it?
Replies: 7
Views: 21691

Does this effect have a name? If so, what is it?

Consider this thought experiment, conducted in a toy universe. You select tens of thousands of images of galaxies, and discard those in which two galaxies appear to be interacting or overlapping, and those in which the central galaxy appears to be 'edge-on' or highly inclined. You prepare images of ...
by JeanTate
Mon Jan 20, 2014 1:31 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: What do you think this object is?
Replies: 9
Views: 19543

Re: What do you think this object is?

I think Jean gave up on us as a serious source of information months ago. I remember having no idea at the time what to write in response to this but it does look like just an odd grouping of distant galaxies to me now. I think a little more context might help too. That's true, and it wasn't just t...
by JeanTate
Mon Jan 20, 2014 1:28 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: What do you think this object is?
Replies: 9
Views: 19543

Re: What do you think this object is?

Well, there's a Green Pea in it. And it looks like either a merging pair of ellipticals, or perhaps a foreground lensing effect splitting the one elliptical galaxy into two. I can't tell if all these are in one galaxy cluster or not. If so, I'd guess the Green Pea is not part of the cluster, since ...
by JeanTate
Fri Jul 19, 2013 4:27 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?
Replies: 8
Views: 1909

Re: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?

Thanks again for your replies, neufer. The question I asked, in the OP, has been answered; to pursue this further - what statistical tests are appropriate for distributions with > four groups, for example; the details of how to do chi-square tests in such cases; and so on - I will find a different f...
by JeanTate
Thu Jul 18, 2013 9:18 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?
Replies: 8
Views: 1909

Re: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?

So, out of all three 2X2 pairs, is it possible to find just a single inconsistent one? Or must there be at least two? If there are four (or more) G/R/Ps, the patterns of results from the pair testing could be used to identify a single G/R/P which is inconsistent, right? I'm not sure how the chi-squa...
by JeanTate
Thu Jul 18, 2013 7:02 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?
Replies: 8
Views: 1909

Re: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?

Thanks again neufer. So, for: #103, 33+29 = 62 #203, 1444+1336 = 2780 But what are #100 and #200? If I add the four counts for #101 and #102, I get 588 (not 580). And for #201 and #202, I get 3555. Was "580" a typo? More generally, a "not inconsistent" conclusion would involve do...
by JeanTate
Thu Jul 18, 2013 3:08 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?
Replies: 8
Views: 1909

Re: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?

Thanks neufer. Yes, I should have asked about in consistency :oops: ; I struggle mightily to understand this (I am entirely self-taught), so please be gentle! You ran three 2x2 contingency table tests (is that the correct way to use the terms?), right? Perhaps if I re-state the question in terms of ...
by JeanTate
Thu Jul 18, 2013 1:29 pm
Forum: The Asterisk Café: Discuss Anything Astronomy Related
Topic: Appropriate statistical test for this situation?
Replies: 8
Views: 1909

Appropriate statistical test for this situation?

Can anyone help me with this, please? It's about how you go about trying to decide if two distributions are consistent, statistically speaking; specifically, what statistical test, or tests, is (are) most appropriate to use. Here's the data: N(A) N(B) G/R/P 0043 0046 #101 0264 0235 #102 0033 0029 #1...
by JeanTate
Sun Mar 31, 2013 9:15 pm
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Estimating the stellar mass of an SDSS galaxy from its color
Replies: 1
Views: 9057

Re: Estimating the stellar mass of an SDSS galaxy from its c

I posted this question on four different fora, here in Starship Asterisk*, the Cosmoquest forum, Galaxy Zoo forum, and Galaxy Zoo Talk. I will continue the discussion in the Galaxy Zoo forum. Please come and join in! :)
by JeanTate
Sat Mar 30, 2013 12:47 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Estimating the stellar mass of an SDSS galaxy from its color
Replies: 1
Views: 9057

Estimating the stellar mass of an SDSS galaxy from its color

Suppose I have a bunch of SDSS galaxies (all spirals), with good - spectroscopic - redshifts and good photometry. Suppose I would like to make estimates of the stellar mass in each galaxy, using just the photometry (and the redshift); specifically, not using the spectra. How would I go about doing t...
by JeanTate
Fri Feb 15, 2013 2:48 pm
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Combining estimated errors (galaxy properties, of the observ
Replies: 1
Views: 17244

Combining estimated errors (galaxy properties, of the observ

Suppose I determine that the position angle (PA) of a galaxy, in one band - observed by SDSS - is -85.4 ± 8.9°, and is 84.7 ± 10.9° in another. Assuming - for now - that the errors have a Gaussian distribution, and that the "±" numbers are 1σ, how do I go about determining if the two (band...
by JeanTate
Tue Feb 05, 2013 3:46 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Anyone familiar with Montage?
Replies: 5
Views: 5654

Re: Anyone familiar with Montage?

The reference in the FITS standard document is incorrect! :o :shock: It is "Greisen, E.W. & Calabretta, M. R. 2002, A&A, 395, 1061 ", which is entitled "Representations of world coordinates in FITS"; the correct reference is "Greisen, E.W. & Calabretta, M. R. 200...
by JeanTate
Tue Feb 05, 2013 3:20 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Anyone familiar with Montage?
Replies: 5
Views: 5654

Re: Anyone familiar with Montage?

Thanks again Chris. Reading the FITS standard (per the link you posted), together with the key words in the FITS header, I have most of what I need to make sense of all this. In particular, CTYPE1 is 'RA---TAN'; CTYPE2 'DEC--TAN'; CUNIT1 (and 2) is 'deg'; CRVAL1 and 2 make sense as RA and DEC, expre...
by JeanTate
Tue Feb 05, 2013 12:14 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Anyone familiar with Montage?
Replies: 5
Views: 5654

Re: Anyone familiar with Montage?

Thank you Chris. In particular, the mJPEG utility. I have three SDSS FITS, cutouts created by GALFIT, all the same size, all centered on the same object; mJPEG gets upset: "Red and green FITS images don't match." From the detailed dump, I see that the values for crval1, crval2, crpix1, crp...
by JeanTate
Mon Feb 04, 2013 9:36 pm
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Anyone familiar with Montage?
Replies: 5
Views: 5654

Anyone familiar with Montage?

In particular, the mJPEG utility. I have three SDSS FITS, cutouts created by GALFIT, all the same size, all centered on the same object; mJPEG gets upset: "Red and green FITS images don't match." From the detailed dump, I see that the values for crval1, crval2, crpix1, crpix2, and crota2 a...
by JeanTate
Sat Nov 24, 2012 1:22 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: What do you think this object is?
Replies: 9
Views: 19543

What do you think this object is?

Image

Its name is SDSS J075137.19+325447.3, and here is its SDSS DR7 spectrum:

Image
by JeanTate
Sat Nov 24, 2012 1:18 am
Forum: The Library: Information Desk and Educational Resources
Topic: Which NGC spiral has the highest redshift?
Replies: 0
Views: 4133

Which NGC spiral has the highest redshift?

The title say it all ... except to clarify: * 'spiral' includes edge-on and lenticulars Follow-on question: which NGC spiral is the largest, physically? Clarifications: * not counting the tidal tails of spirals in mergers * 'largest, physically', as a metric, should be consistent (i.e./e.g. NGC ABCD...
by JeanTate
Fri Oct 29, 2010 8:37 pm
Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
Topic: GZOD: a double star, courtesy of Hubble
Replies: 3
Views: 942

Re: GZOD: a double star, courtesy of Hubble

I'd love to check out the color index of this star, to see how the filters of SDSS "interpret" the actual color of stars. Well, I'm not going to find out about the color index of this star. I followed the link to the Galaxy Zoo page, and while I got excellent coordinates for the star that...
by JeanTate
Thu Oct 28, 2010 1:37 am
Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
Topic: GZOD: Cosmic Cuttlefish
Replies: 2
Views: 643

GZOD: Cosmic Cuttlefish

http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1141/5117690260_ac30b1e3b2_b.jpg Stellar190 got fascinated by NGC 1142, and wrote a whole Galaxy Zoo Object of the Day on it, stardate 27th October, 2010 . This image is her own version of the SDSS data, made by downloading the FITS data and playing working with the f...
by JeanTate
Tue Oct 26, 2010 11:54 pm
Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
Topic: GZOD: a double star, courtesy of Hubble
Replies: 3
Views: 942

GZOD: a double star, courtesy of Hubble

http://zoo-hst.s3.amazonaws.com/90040267.jpg Looks vaguely like some bad art from the 1960s, eh? It's actually a rather bright double star imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope; AHZ40006z8 is its Galaxy Zoo identifier. Alice posted this as the Galaxy Zoo Object of the Day , stardate 23rd September, ...
by JeanTate
Mon Oct 25, 2010 10:03 pm
Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
Topic: GZOD: An Arrow Through A Galactic Heart
Replies: 2
Views: 752

GZOD: An Arrow Through A Galactic Heart

http://s3.amazonaws.com/zoo2_extra/334182.jpg The object goes by the incredibly simple name of SDSS J233604.13+000440.6 (not!), but I think 'arrow pierced galaxy' is better. It's featured in the Galaxy Zoo Object of the Day , stardate 22nd October, 2010 , by Lightbulb500. As far as I know, it has n...
by JeanTate
Sun Oct 24, 2010 3:02 pm
Forum: The Observation Deck: Latest Sky Photography
Topic: GZOD: cosmic confetti
Replies: 2
Views: 562

GZOD: cosmic confetti

http://zoo-hst.s3.amazonaws.com/90022411.jpg http://zoo-hst.s3.amazonaws.com/90029358.jpg Budgieye, in her Galaxy Zoo Object of the Day , stardate 8th October, 2010 , posted several examples of cosmic ray artifacts in Hubble Zoo images. Most times the raw images are cleaned of these artifacts befor...