2023-01-27

Gothamfest

Once a year (and differently every year), we get together as much of the astronomical community in New York City as we can and have them give fast talks. Today was great! I learned a huge amount, and no highlight reel would do. But here are some examples: Amanda Quirk (Columbia) has great data on M33 stars that maybe we could use to build images of the orbital toruses using technology that Price-Whelan and I developed over the last few years? Marc Huertas-Company (Paris) said (confidently?) that many of the star-forming galaxies found by JWST at very high redshift are likely prolate. Michael Higgins (CUNY) and Keaton Bell (CUNY) have a beautiful system to separate sources of variability out in NASA TESS data using structure in frequency space. Kate Storey-Fisher (NYU) showed results from Giulio Fabbian cross-correlating her ESA Gaia quasar sample with the ESA Planck lensing map, with better error bars than any previous survey! Ben Cassese (Columbia) showed a moving-object pipeline with NASA TESS imaging that detects outer Solar System objects, much like old work by Dustin Lang and myself.

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