AST Journal Club, Summer 2022

This material can be found online at URL

http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/jclub/jclub.html

Once a week, students and faculty of the AST program congregate to chat about this and that, socialize, nibble on tasty snacks, drink tea, and discuss the latest developments in astronomy. Please join us.

When?
Wednesday, 3:00 PM: Tea and snacks; followed at 3:30 PM by talks
Where?
Carlson Building, outside (or inside) East-side lobby for snacks, followed by CAR-1275 for talks. We'll meet in person whenever possible, but if it's necessary to hold a meeting over Zoom, we'll use this link.
How?
Use the RIT Astrophysics Journal Club entry on benty-fields to submit papers for us to discuss.
Tea?
Yes, many different kinds of tea

Typically, three people will lead discussions during each meeting. Contact Michael Richmond to sign up for a timeslot. I will write your name in the table below.

We ask that you please consider leaving feedback and comments for each speaker. Use the Google sheet below.

May 25 Michael Richmond
A Comprehensive Measurement of the Local Value of the Hubble Constant with 1 km/s/Mpc Uncertainty from the Hubble Space Telescope and the SH0ES Team
Michael Richmond
New meteor shower/storm on May 30/31??

June 8 Nikki Noughani
The case for space environmentalism
Andy Robinson
RESOLVE and ECO: Finding Low-metallicity z ∼ 0 Dwarf AGN Candidates Using Optimized Emission-line Diagnostics

June 22 Andy Robinson
Discovery of the most luminous quasar of the last 9 Gyr See also Astronomer's Telegram 15450 and AT 15452
Brittany Vanderhoof
Probing cold gas in a massive, compact star-forming galaxy at z=6
Michael Lam
Young, blue, and isolated stellar systems in the Virgo Cluster. II. A new class of stellar system
Sara Rosborough
M et al. (2008), N (2009), M et al. (2009), N & M (2010),
July 6 Michael Richmond
Searching for Transit Timing Variations and Fitting a New Ephemeris to Transits of TrES-1 b see also the MicroObservatory page
Michael Richmond
A Supernova in a Magnified Multiply Imaged Galaxy at Redshift z=1.76 see also a finding chart
Michael Richmond
A Sample of Neutron Star and Black Hole Binaries Detected through Gaia DR3 Astrometry
?
False positives and the challenge of testing the alien hypothesis
July 20 Joel Kastner
First images from JWST
Michael Richmond
Two Remarkably Luminous Galaxy Candidates at z = 11 - 13 Revealed by JWST (for background, see spectrum of an A7V star )
Michael Lam
PSR J0952-0607: The Fastest and Heaviest Known Galactic Neutron Star
Michael Richmond
Update on micrometeoroid damage to JWST
Aug 3 Sara Rosborough
M et al. (2008), N (2009), M et al. (2009), N & M (2010), (plus some notes )
Michael Richmond
JWST image of Stefan's Quintet: more than just a pretty picture


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This page maintained by Michael Richmond.