2019-10-25

substructure, phases, EPRV

Nora Shipp (Chicago) has been in town this week, working with Adrian Price-Whelan to find halo substructures and stellar streams around the Milky Way. The two of them made beautiful animations, paging through distance slices, showing halo stellar density (as measured by a color-magnitude matched filter). There are lots of things visible in those animations! We discussed the point that what makes overdensities appear to the human eye is their coherence through slices.

That made me think of things that Bill Freeman (MIT) and his lab does with amplifying small signals in video: Should we be looking for small overdensities with similar tricks? Freeman's lab uses phase transforms (like Fourier transforms and more localized versions of those) to detect and amplify small motions. Maybe we should use phase transforms here too. That led Price-Whelan and me to hack a little bit on this image pair by Judy Schmidt, which was fun but useless!

Late in the day, Megan Bedell (Flatiron), Lily Zhao (Yale), Debra Fischer (Yale), and I all met to discuss EXPRES data. It turns out that what the EXPRES team has in terms of data, and what they need in terms of technology, is incredibly well aligned with what Bedell and I want to do in the EPRV space. For example, EXPRES has been used to resolve the asteroseismic p-modes in a star. For another, it has made excellent observations of a spotty star. For another, it has a calibration program that wants to go hierarchical. I left work at the end of the day extremely excited about the opportunities here.

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