Title: David Higgins
1The A Lazy Astronomer
2Some Caveats
- Im not an amateur scientist.
- Dont ask me too many questions about the
science. - Im an amateur observer.
- Ask me all the questions you want on how to
observe. - So why do I do it or Whats in it for me?
- What benefits mankind benefits me.
- The challenge
- Recognition
3In the beginning (2000)
- There was this enormous telescope in the
Australian Geographic Shop
4The Fad!
- Have telescope will look at interesting objects
in the sky! - However.
- Interesting things were hard to find
- Cant see much with a small scope
- Is this all there is? Is there nothing more?
5Its Got to be easier
- More cash and a goto Scope.
6The Fad continues!
- Have telescope will look at interesting objects
in the sky! - Interesting things were easy to find
- Can see much more with a nice big scope
- Public Nights (the robotic scopes tended to be
the centre of attention) - However.
- One Galaxy or nebula looks like the next just
grey smudges. Clusters, well they were just a
bunch of stars. - Is this all there is? Is there nothing more?
7Something Practical
- I felt the need to do something useful this is
a science after all!
- Occultation's (Lunar, Graze and Asteroidal)
- Not as easy as it looks
- My data had to be accurate
- Its real science
Im hooked
8An Opportunity Knocks
- Service Observer positions on offer at Mt Stromlo
Observatory - MicroFun (MicroLensing events in the Galactic
Bulge) - Training offered
- Observing Techniques
- Setup and Use of the 74 Cassegrain
- Setup and use of Large Format CCD
- Auto-guiding (ST-5)
- Image Capture and analysis (including manual
check for pointing pattern matching against the
finder image provided.
And we even got paid..
9Occulations are no longer enough
- After Stromlo..
- There's more science out there within the reach
of the average amateur - The obvious areas..
- Pretty Pictures (Science?)
- Variable Stars (everyone's doing it)
- Exotic areas such as Gamma Ray Bursts
- Supernovae hunting
10Tried Pretty Pictures
Hubble can do better why compete?
11Variable Stars and special events
- AAVSO Variables
- Everyone's doing it but there are many targets
that no-one are monitoring! - AAVSO bulletin 70 targets in need of
observation (mostly southern stars) - Special Events
- Gamma Ray Bursts like GRB030329 (but they dont
come around that often.)
12More Science Options
- Minor Planet Astrometry
- Chance at discovering something!
- Where were amateurs really needed in the Minor
Planet world? - New target follow-up
- NEOs
- Comets
- Good chance of making ones own discoveries
- Photometry (that nasty word in the amateur world)
- Give it a whirl but there arent too many people
to assist
13Minor Planets - The hunt is on
- A Survey out of the question
- FOV was way to small
- New object confirmation and NEO follow-up was
rewarding - Get published in lots of MPECs and a few IAUCs
- Confirmation of new comets (many of them beyond
the reach of most amateurs). - Many amateur setups are far more powerful than
most are willing to admit. - How do I join the club?
14The MPC club
- Joining the club is relatively easy but can be a
time consuming process - Prove you can make appropriate observations
- Take a series of observations of a couple of NON
bright numbered planets over a number of nights
and submit your astrometry - If its accurate youll get an Observatory Id.
If its not, fix the problem and keep trying. - The MPC staff are the judges not you.
- E14 (Hunters Hill Observatory) was assigned in
November 2002 - In 2003 and 2004 more than 1,000 Astrometric
observations of NEOs were reported to the MPC
with an average accuracy of /- 0.05 with
residuals averaging 0.5 in RA and Dec.
15The basic setup and procedure
- A GOTO tracking Telescope (though there are
amateur drift setups that have proven to be very
successful and productive) - Fast download, medium size CCD mounted at no more
than 3/pixel resolution (ideally between 1-2) - Method
- Proper planning
- Where and when is it visible
- What is your observing strategy, ie 3 x 15 x 30
second integrations or 3 x 90 x 6 second
integrations (how faint and how fast?) - Track and stack the first set. Is the target
visible? Stay on it or move to the next target. - Measure and report
16Are amateurs needed in this field anymore?
- Yes and no..
- Very few professional telescopes look inside the
Solar System. - The weather at the sites that do look for Solar
System bodies is not always suitable (cloud, wind
etc). - Professional Scopes
- Sometimes breakdown or go in for maintenance.
- Restrict themselves to certain parts of the sky
(ie not close to the sun).
17Discovery
- My very first discovery
- 2004 HJ48
- Discovery breeds more
- 2004 JY6
- Other discovery avenues Spacewatch FMO
- 2005 UL1
Do I own real estate now?
18A shift in my priority
- Minor Planet Astrometry was a lot of hit and
miss work. - Astrometry wasnt terribly challenging anymore.
- There are a lot of observers (around 100 active
Pro/Am Observatories returning data at any given
time) - Needed to find an area that needed more observers
Minor Planet Photometry (oooooh theres that
nasty word again)
19Minor Planet Photometry
- Started in 2002
- Have completed a lot of Minor Planets (at least
first pass) and 10s of thousands left to do. - Collaborations with other Amateurs and
professionals, local and abroad. - No discoveries as such but we did resolve a lot
of rotation periods.
20Lightcurves
21Software
- It is a hey-day for user friendly software
development (have you ever tried to install
IRAF?), new advancements in observational
techniques, automated data reduction and
analysis. - Remote control and automation
- ACP4, MPO Connections, AstroPlanner, The Sky,
MaxIm DL/CCD - Observation Planning
- AstroPlanner, ACP Planner/Scheduler
- Image calibration
- MaxIm DL, AIP4WIN, MPO Canopus
- Data extraction
- Astrometrica, MPO Canopus and Photored, AIP4WIN,
MaxIm DL - Data analysis
- MPO Canopus (including Minor Planet H-G and Shape
modelling), Binary Maker 3 - Making measurements less painful (particularly
photometry)
22The remote observatory (2002)
- Benefits
- Sit in the warm, dry comfort.
- No bugs or moths.
- Do more than just sit on the telescope.
- Spend more time with the Spouse.
- Problems
- Set up and demount each night.
23Getting Serious (2003)
- I needed
- A permanent setup.
- To gather more light
- Bigger telescope.
- Bigger camera.
- Introduce Automation (software was already
available) - More targets.
- More and better utilisation of Observing time.
- No all nighters (for me that is).
24The Observatory (2003)
- Basic Garden shed with modified roof mount to
allow it to roll on and off. - Fits in any backyard no matter how small
- Dont be deceived by this 90 panorama shot.
Garden is 5m x 13m - I now have a permanent setup for the scope
25The along came a Grant
- I needed
- a larger camera with fixed cooling to improve my
photometry - a camera supported by the automation software
- money to buy said camera
- By accident I stumbled onto the Gene Shoemaker
NEO grant through The Planetary Society. - I applied in 2004/2005 (Amateurs can apply for
grants just like the ones the Pros apply for) - Did I have what they were looking for?
26Applying for a Grant
- What is involved?
- Read the grant conditions very carefully. They
will have criteria and you will need to meet them
all. - Know what you want, why, what results you expect
to achieve with the grant and how that will meet
the grants conditions. - Write a proposal and justify why you should be
entitled to a grant ie why you and not someone
else. - It is a competitive process. You are competing
for this money from both Professional and amateur
sources. - The Risk
- Understand that paying grant money to an amateur
is a risk ie will it actually be used for what it
was intended? Why then should they entrust money
to you? - The Reward
- I won the grant got the camera.
27More about grants
- What did I have to offer?
- I had 2 years solid experience in the field the
grant was aimed at and data to back me up. - I had a semi automated setup i.e. I wasnt
constrained by observing time - Observatory had a published track record (number
of hours open, type of work, quality of work) - I met all the criteria
- I was already known to most of those on the
allocation panel - I had to compete against 24 other proposals only
8 got up including mine.
28Grant money New opportunities
- The Observatory could now be fully automated.
- More targets
- More observing time
- New observing work to fill the holes when MP
Photometry was not suitable. - Large volume Variable Observations
- Periodic SN survey of southern galaxies
- ExtraSolar planet hunt via Gravitational
Microlensing
29The Automated Observatory
- Start with an Observing Script
- Auto Point, Platesolve and correct pointing (ie
centre object) - Find a guide star then start autoguiding
- Select filter
- Autofocus as required
- Start imaging
- Download image, solve, update pointing
- Move to next target or next iteration of current
target
30Binary Asteroid Photometric Survey
- The search for Asynchronous Binary Asteroids (and
the occasional Synchronous one) - Discoveries galore (6 binaries to date)
- Lots of publications -Icarus, CBET, Minor Planet
Bulletin
31Variable Stars and Sn Search
- 50-60 Variable stars imaged a night (bracketed
exposures 15, 60, 240 seconds) - Serendipitous discovery of 3 eclipsing binaries
in MP Photometry images and 1 yet to be
identified Variable. - Working on an automated photometric reduction
process. - 80-100 Galaxies imaged a night (120 second
exposures) - Simple blink processing to find any SN
32MicroFun (Ohio-State University)
- Gravitational Microlensing(the search for extra
solar planets) - Imaging the galactic bulge
- Crowded field photometry. In this case the Pros
want your calibrated images to measure
themselves. - Average target at Imag 16. Long exposures
required - Imaging at f/10 on a 3.5m focal length scope is
problematic without good tracking (0.5
resolution per pixel)
33Occultation moves up a gear
- Occultation goes Video with GPS Time Insertion
- Precision to 0.04s and no personal error
34Rewards
- Minor Planet named in my honour for completing
more than a 1000 NEO astrometric observations -
(32750) DaveHiggins - Discoveries
- 2 Main Belt Asteroids,
- 1 NEO,
- 5 Variable Stars (4 EW Binaries and 1 suspect
multi mode RR Lyrae) - 6 Binary Asteroids (though I have been on the
CBET for many more) - Directly Assisted Professionals (and appear in
their papers) - BinAstPhotSurvey
- Arecibo Radar Observation Support
- Shape modelling and YORP studies
- CARA Comet Observations
- MicroFun
- AAVSO
- Grants!
35Where to from here?
- Encouraging Amateur participation in Science
- Swinburne Astronomy Online Course
- Spectroscopy?
- Cheap wide field survey with a digital SLR
(cant let Terry Lovejoy get all the southern
comets) - Another telescope, more cameras, more coverage,
more data. - I want one of these ..
36Dreams
- A Meade 20 RCX on MaxMount being beta tested by
Jason Ware in the US. - This is what grants are for but at approx 50,000
AU it might be a stretch for an amateur to
expect! (Im still trying to convince my wife.
Trust me - I can make it fit in my current
observatory)