egg changed the topic of #kspacademia to: https://git.io/JqLs2 | Dogs are cats. Spiders are cat interferometers. | Document well, for tomorrow you may get mauled by a ネコバス. | <UmbralRaptor> egg|nomz|egg: generally if your eyes are dewing over, that's not the weather. | <ferram4> I shall beat my problems to death with an engineer. | We can haz pdf | Logs: https://esper.irclog.whitequark.org/kspacademia
_whitelogger has joined #kspacademia
_whitelogger has joined #kspacademia
_whitelogger has joined #kspacademia
<WeylandsWings>
So I got really annoyed at a conference paper for not having a DOI on it yesterday
<WeylandsWings>
I was in a meeting and pulled up a useful paper and wanted the presenter to display it on the screen while we discussed it and stuff related to it. But it didn’t have a DOI on it so had to read off the title
<galois>
[arXiv] “NANCY: Next-generation All-sky Near-infrared Community surveY” Jiwon Jesse Han, Arjun Dey, Adrian M. Price-Whelan et al. — «The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is capable of delivering an unprecedented all-sky, high-spatial resolution, multi-epoch infrared map to the astronomical community. This opportunity arises in the midst of numerous ground- and space-based surveys that will provide extensive spectroscopy and…»
<raptop>
TRAPPIST-1 b: bare rock. 1 c: we don't know yet, but if it does have an atmosphere, it's thin: https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.10150
<galois>
[arXiv] “No thick carbon dioxide atmosphere on the rocky exoplanet TRAPPIST-1 c” Sebastian Zieba, Laura Kreidberg, Elsa Ducrot et al. — «Seven rocky planets orbit the nearby dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, providing a unique opportunity to search for atmospheres on small planets outside the Solar System (Gillon et al., 2017). Thanks to the recent launch of JWST, possible atmospheric constituents such as carbon dioxide (CO2) are now…»
<galois>
[arXiv] “ADEPT Drag Modulation Aerocapture: Applications for Future Titan Exploration” Athul Pradeepkumar Girija — «The Cassini-Huygens mission has transformed our understanding of Titan from a hazy veiled moon to a place surprisingly like the Earth, with terrestrial physical processes such as wind, rainfall, and erosion shaping the landscape albeit with entirely different chemistry and temperatures. Dragonfly, a single element…»
<galois>
[arXiv] “The Impact of GSM towers in Radio Astronomy” Isaac Sihlangu, Nadeem Oozeer — «Radio astronomy is a specialised area of astronomy that examines the radio emissions from astronomical bodies within the electromagnetic spectrum's radio range. As radio telescopes have become increasingly sensitive due to technological advancements, radio astronomers face the significant challenge of reducing the impact of human-generated…»
<galois>
[arXiv] “RoSETZ: Roman Survey of the Earth Transit Zone -- a SETI-optimized survey for habitable-zone exoplanets” Eamonn Kerins, Supachai Awiphan, Kathryn Edmondson et al. — «In this White Paper for Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (Roman) science, we propose the Roman Survey of the Earth Transit Zone (RoSETZ), a transit search for rocky planets within the habitable zones (HZs) of stars located within the Earth Transit Zone…»
<SnoopJ>
I wonder if GHz stuff has an impact but I guess GSM doesn't quite get there
<SnoopJ>
oh wait, they're looking in one of those bands as well. good news indeed I suppose
<raptop>
yeah
<raptop>
unsure how eg: starlink interacts with it
<galois>
[arXiv] “Magnifying NASA Roman GBTDS exoplanet science with coordinated observations by ESA Euclid” Eamonn Kerins, Etienne Bachelet, Jean-Philippe Beaulieu et al. — «The ESA Euclid mission is scheduled to launch on July 1st 2023. This White Paper discusses how Euclid observations of the Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey (GBTDS) area could dramatically enhance the exoplanet science output of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope…»
<galois>
[arXiv] “Fat cosmic ray tracks in charge-coupled devices” Theodore A. Grosson, Andrei Nomerotski, The LSST Dark Energy Science Collaboration — «Cosmic rays are particles from the upper atmosphere which often leave bright spots and trails in images from telescope CCDs. We investigate so-called ``fat" cosmic rays seen in images from Vera C. Rubin Observatory and the Subaru Telescope. These tracks are much wider and brighter than…»
<galois>
[arXiv] “Modulation depth of the gyrosynchrotron emission as identifier of fundamental sausage modes” M. Cécere, A. Costa, T. Van Doorsselaere — «We study the intensity, the modulation depth and the mean modulation depth of the gyrosynchrotron (GS) radiation as a function of the frequency and the line of sight (LOS) in fast sausage modes. By solving the 2.5D MHD ideal equations of a straight coronal loop considering the…»
<raptop>
(not to be confused with a sausage catastrophe)
<galois>
[arXiv] “Einstein beams and the diffractive aspect of gravitationally-lensed light” Valeria Rodriguez-Fajardo, Thao P. Nguyen, Kiyan S. Hocek et al. — «The study of light lensed by cosmic matter has yielded much information about astrophysical questions. Observations are explained using geometrical optics following a ray-based description of light. After deflection the lensed light interferes, but observing this diffractive…»
<raptop>
good
<SnoopJ>
I didn't put in a retry but maybe I should give it a few attempts
<galois>
[arXiv] “Modelling Slope Microclimates in the Mars Planetary Climate Model” L. Lange, F. Forget, E. Dupont et al. — «A large number of surface phenomena (e.g., frost and ice deposits, gullies, slope streaks, recurring slope lineae) are observed on Martian slopes. Their formation is associated with specific microclimates on these slopes that have been mostly studied with one-dimensional radiative balance models to date. We…»
<galois>
[arXiv] “Interstellar Comets from Post-Main Sequence Systems as Tracers of Extrasolar Oort Clouds” W. Garrett Levine, Aster G. Taylor, Darryl Z. Seligman et al. — «Interstellar small bodies are unique probes into the histories of exoplanetary systems. One hypothesized class of interlopers are "Jurads," exo-comets released into the Milky Way during the post-main sequence as the thermally-pulsing asymptotic giant branch (AGB)…»
<raptop>
"Cool a piece of the Sun to 1000 K at one millibar pressure to yield a mineral assemblage consistent with those found in the most primitive meteorites." https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.12645
<galois>
[arXiv] “Condensation Calculations in Planetary Science and Cosmochemistry” Denton S. Ebel — «Cool a piece of the Sun to 1000 K at one millibar pressure to yield a mineral assemblage consistent with those found in the most primitive meteorites. This is an equilibrium or fractional condensation experiment simulated by calculations using equations of state for hundreds of gaseous molecules, condensed mineral solids, and silicate…»