NITARP tutorials
Held roughly monthly. You need to register so that I can mail you the relevant phone numbers and join.me links just prior to the tutorial. Archived here and on YouTube if you can't attend live.
Done ones
- First NITARP Tutorial: WISE and the WISE Archive (Nov 2012): Done by Luisa Rebull (SSC/IPAC). Part 1: WISE overview - what is the mission, the big picture (20 min); Part 2: the WISE archive - how to access the archive (20 min); Part 3: questions - questions from those online and on the phone (8 min)
- Second NITARP Tutorial: ds9 (Jan 2013): Done by Luisa Rebull (SSC/IPAC). Part 1: ds9 overview - what is ds9, etc (10.5 min); Part 2: the first half of the ds9 demo - getting it started, basics of usage (19 min); Part 3: the second half of the ds9 demo - more advanced tips and tricks (25 min) Having problems making ds9 start up on a Mac? Make sure you have X windows installed - it is free, though if you get it from the App Store, it will make you give them an address. Also try this site. More help on installing ds9 from Chandra. NB: for Mac OS 10.8 users: No formal X11 support is provided for this OS version, but it appears that DS9 version 6.1 will still work even with 10.8.
Planned ones with dates
- Third NITARP Tutorial: Skynet, and Skynet Junior Scholars - Vivian Hoette - Feb 28, 3:30 pm Pacific time - http://skynet.unc.edu/ - registration form
SKYNET is a distributed network of robotic telescopes operated by students, faculty, and staff at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The network began operation in January 2006 with the opening of the six PROMPT telescopes in Chile. Since then, several more telescopes in the U.S. and Europe have been integrated into the network. We are ramping up to integrate many new telescopes around the world throughout 2011 and 2012. Vivian Hoette (Yerkes Observatory) will tell us about Skynet in general, how you can use it, and more about her program called Skynet Junior Scholars - she sent mail about this specific program a little while ago.
- Fourth NITARP Tutorial: TO BE CONFIRMED: ISAC http://iasc.hsutx.edu/ - Patrick Miller, Denise Rothrock - March?
- Fifth NITARP Tutorial: Chandra ds9 labs http://chandra-ed.harvard.edu/ - Terry Matilsky (Rutgers) - April 16, 4pm EASTERN=1pm PACIFIC .. note that this is earlier than the other tutorials have been
Terry Matilsky will teach us all about the really nice Chandra data analysis activities available here. PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS TUTORIAL REQUIRES SOME ADVANCE WORK FROM YOU, because it will assume some knowledge as a prerequisite. You need to:
- Obtain and install ds9 and verify that it works on your computer.
- Have some operational familiarity with ds9, at the very least having watched the January ds9 tutorial above, or equivalent.
- Read the core pages from the Chandra 101 pages here.
- Pre-register here.
- Sixth NITARP Tutorial: TO BE CONFIRMED: Getting your NITARP (etc) story into your local media - Tim Spuck and Ardis Herrold - May?
Hoped-for ones
(in no particular order, in various stages of planning)
- Spitzer, the SHA, the enhanced products - Luisa(*)
- Planck, and its archive - release in March?- Peregrine?
- NASA Exoplanet Archive (and by extension, Kepler and maybe even CoRoT??) -- Solange(*) "after May"
- WISE asteroids and comets.
- APT, from 'what is photometry' through latest bells and whistles. may be 2-parter. (Varoujan and Russ)(*) "after April"
- finding data at other wavelengths - Skyview from goddard. finderchart. 2mass. other archives?
- Spatial resolution??
- LCOGT http://lcogt.net/ -- JD Armstrong(*)
- Guidance on getting research into the classroom?? Guidance on curriculum development??
- Edubites overview?? - Carolyn
- Excel?? many tutorials already online at YouTube - get a NITARP alum teacher to do one on "things you should know about Excel but were afraid to ask?"
- HOU http://www.handsonuniverse.org/ and http://astro.uchicago.edu/yerkes/outreach/activities/Explorations/ http://www.globalsystemsscience.org/software/download - Alan Gould, Carl Penneypacker?? - particularly interested in HOU legacy of extensively tested labs; newer opportunities such as IASC and Skynet are also represented in the list here, but separately from HOU.
- SED tool - Sally Seebode
- SDSS labs http://cas.sdss.org/dr5/en/proj/teachers/ - ??
- how to come up with project ideas
- Micro Observatory http://mo-www.harvard.edu/MicroObservatory/ - Susan Sunbury et al.(*)
- MAST?
- NRAO teacher opportunities - Sue Ann Heatherly (*)
- WWT http://www.worldwidetelescope.org - Pat Udomprasaert??
- NOAO RBSE lessons http://www.noao.edu/education/arbse/arpd