The Amateur Sky Survey Project
Glenn Gombert
Miami Valley Astronomical Society
Dayton, Ohio
A presentation for the 109'th meeting of the Astronomical
Society of the Pacific, held in Chicago, IL
transliterated from Powerpoint to HTML by
Michael Richmond, June 19, 1997
You may prefer
a GIF version of the presentation.
Glenn has written
a short report after the meeting.
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What is the Amateur Sky Survey ?
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The Amateur Sky Survey (TASS) is a group of amateurs
(and several professionals) who are building a set
of CCD drift scan cameras, and writing the associated data
reduction software which will be used to
monitor a wide angle strip of the sky.
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The TASS Project Objective:
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TASS is an Astronomical "Survey" Project whose purpose
is to record a wide-strip of sky on a regular basis
from multiple sites.
Previous large scale astronomical survey projects:
Palomar Sky Survey's I & II.
Modern day astronomical survey projects include MACHO and OGLE.
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Characteristics of a "Sky Survey"
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Typically records a large area of the sky at any one time.
Palomar Sky Survey's photographed a 6 degree field down to 21st magnitude.
MACHO and OGLE Surveys perform millions of photometric
measurements per night searching for "Micro-Lensing" events.
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Objectives of the TASS Project:
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Image a 3 degree area of the sky, centered about 0 degrees Declination from multiple sites.
Perform stellar measurements in several different photometric bands
Develop automated software techniques of data reduction.
Share results over the Internet.
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List of TASS participants:
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- chris@topdog.pas1.logicon.com (Chris Albertson)
- nwm@acm.org (Molhant Norman)
- richmond@astro.Princeton.EDU (Michael Richmond)
- bp@astro.Princeton.EDU (Bohdan Paczynski)
- rybskip@uwwvax.uww.edu (Paul Rybski)
- rjw@crl.com (Ron Wickersham)
- beser@aplcomm.jhuapl.edu (Nick Beser)
- Michael_Gutzwiller@aici.com (Michael Gutzwiller)
- droege@fnal.fnal.gov (Tom Droege)
- Jure.Skvarc@ijs.si (Jure Skvarc)
- hjohnson@pluto.njcc.com (Herbert R Johnson)
- ggombert@infinet.com (Glenn Gombert)
- aah@nofs.navy.mil (Arne Henden)
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Current TASS Camera Locations:
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- Batavia, Illinois. triplet #7, run by Tom Droege
- Cincinnati, Ohio, triplet #3 run by Mike Gutzwiller
- East Braintree, Vermont. triplet #2 , run by Michael Richmond
- Baltimore, Maryland. triplet #6 , run by Nick Beser
- Santa Rosa, California. triplet #5 , run by Ron Wickersham
- Kettle Moraine, Wisconsin. triplet #4, run by Paul Rybski
- Dayton, Ohio,triplet #1,run by Glenn Gombert
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TASS "Mark III Camera" Overview:
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Each camera element uses a Kodak KAF-0400 chip and 135 mm camera lens .
Three camera elements are combined to form a "triplet" .
The middle camera is pointed due South with
the other two cameras offset by +/- 15 degrees (1 hour) in RA.
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TASS "Mark III Camera" Overview(cont.):
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The middle camera uses a photometric "
V" band filter, end cameras uses "I" band filters.
Image scale "on-chip" is 13.8 arcseconds/pixel
Each camera acquires data continuously in "drift-scan" or TDI mode.
Equivalent exposure is 492 seconds.
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Characteristics of TASS Mark III Camera:
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Each camera records a 3
degree wide "strip" of sky all night long (barring clouds).
Average amount of data collected (per clear night) is 150 megabytes.
Five TASS site have collected data on a regular basis.
Limiting magnitude ~14.5 "V" Band, ~13.4 "I" Band.
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TASS Image File Format:
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TASS images written to disk in 16 bit integer FITS format.
Beginning RA for each image is calculated from local time.
Each image file is 800 x 896 (1.42 megabytes)
FITS image header can be
customized as necessary to fit the needs of each installation.
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TASS Software:
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Real-time DOS control program that is used
to acquire images from a TASS triplet.
Various types of image processing
software are presently used to reduce TASS images to calibrated "lists"
(catalogs) of astronomical objects.
Astronomical "catalogs" are the final product from TASS image processing.
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- "RAW" Stellar Catalog
X & Y locations of each star
found in a TASS ccd image along with an estimate of its instrumental
magnitude.
- "Calibrated" Stellar Catalog
RA & DEC of each star detected in
an image with an estimate of its photometric magnitude.
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Current TASS Project:
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Image three different fields on regular basis:
- Field-A: RA =12:30 - 12:45 Dec = +0 (high galactic latitude, ecliptic)
- Field-B: RA = 08:45 - 09:00 Dec = +0 (low galactic latitude)
- Field-C: RA = 16:30 - 16:45 Dec = +0 (remains visible for months)
Combining the results from different
sites with results presented at June AAS meeting
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June AAS Meeting featured a joint "Professional/Amateur"session
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Leif J. Robinson (Sky & Telescope) and
Laurence A. Marschall (Gettysburg College) organized
a one-day session of oral and poster presentations by
professionals and amateurs as part of the 190th
meeting of the American Astronomical Society
The aim is to showcase joint projects that have already
yielded results and to identify possibilities for future
one-on-one collaborations between amateurs and
professionals.
Tom Droege, Michael Richmond and Glenn
Gombert presented papers on various aspects of the TASS Project.
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Arne Henden at the US Naval Observatory has used
his FAAST telescope to produce photometeic
standards for the A,B, & C TASS fields
Henden has also written a suite of
programs to take TASS catalogs generated at various sites to one
composite set of measurements.
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USNO FASTT Standard Fields:
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These standards are in three 11x11arcmin regions in SMSP-B
They range in brightness from V=8.6 to V=17,
and so should be good to use in determining faintness
limits on the TASS frames.
The astrometry is good to about +-0.1 arcsec;
the photometry is typically 0.01mag accuracy, using a 12arcsec aperture.
They were determined on the basis of three consecutive
photometric nights on the 1.0m FASTT-USNO telescope.
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Analysis Of TASS A/B/C "SMSP" Fields:
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"Collate" the results of each nights "calibrated" star-lists
into one file which contains at least two
photometric measurements of each star ("V" & "I" band)
"Transform" collated star-lists into standard photometric magnitudes.
Create a "master-list" of all photometric
measurements from each of the TASS cameras star-lists for a given
Field (A/B/C)
Create a "master-list" of differential magnitudes
that did not have photomertic conditions (based on 10 near-by stars)
Create list of candidate variables for each field
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The Amateur Sky Syrvey
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Candidate Variable Stars Form SMSP -"A" Field
Star ID RA Dec quality notes
271 186.7608 -0.6216 fair GSC 4941:395
518 187.7910 -2.0670 fair SAO 132882
699 188.5854 -1.1772 good BP Vir; GSC 4948:401
726 188.6651 -0.6326 fair GSC 4948:57
1100 190.2649 -0.6204 good MG found; SAA 138910; K5
1127 190.3701 -1.7066 fair GSC 4949:843
1328 191.2854 -0.4616 fair GSC 4949:1092
1333 191.3202 -0.2781 good
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Future Plans:
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Continue to acquire and reduce data from TASS Mark III camera sites
Mark IV TASS camera is under development
(will image 35 square degrees of sky )
NSF Proposal has been written to establish an
international photometric database at Princeton University
in collaboration with mico-lensing surveys accessed via the Internet
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Closing quote from Dr. Bohdan Paczynski
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"The Amateur Sky Survey is a new phenomenon, the beginning of a new epoch. These "amateurs" use modern technology: CCD detectors for data acquisition, powerful
computers for data processing, and the Internet for communication.
For many years I was dreaming about developing a similar system. The success of microlensing searches made me think this it should be possible to monitor brightness of
millions of stars over the whole sky every night. When I "discovered" TASS almost two years ago I realized that the task is not only feasible, but that the project is already under
development. I am currently planning, in an informal collaboration with TASS and my colleges at the Warsaw University Observatory, a development of a database of photometric
measurements that would be readily available over Internet.
The Amateur Sky Survey
Closing quote from Dr. Bohdan Paczynski
One may envision discoveries of new variable objects to be done not by an observer looking through a telescope, but by anybody with Internet access browsing through the
database. The volume of data streaming out of microlensing searches, and soon to stream out of numerous TASS cameras is so immense that there is no way a single person, or
even a single group can cope with the data flow. When technology matures the individual observations may turn out to be "too cheap to meter", and the bottleneck will not be
related to the telescopes or CCD cameras, but to human brainpower available for data analysis.
I is very exciting that "amateurs" are leading in this new development. the immense volume of data and finding new variables, new types of objects..
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Internet Sites of Interest:
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