Archive for the ‘outreach’ Category

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A flood of results from Herschel….

May 6, 2010

Herschel image of RCW 120

I’m currently sitting in the ESA ESLAB conference in Noordwijk, Holland, listening to a barrage of new results from Herschel. It’s been an extraordinarily busy few months for us all, finally sitting down with our first science-quality datasets from the various instruments on Herschel, and reducing them/analysing the results, and finally, writing the first papers.

Most of us have had their Science Demonstration papers accepted by the ‘Astronomy & Astrophysics’ journal – generally, the responsible space agency (ESA in this case) works with one of the professional astronomy journals to publish short papers in a ‘special edition’ of the journal, which is given over entirely to those results. The fruit of those labours are being presented at Noordwijk this week – in my case, my work on the Dwarf Galaxy Survey was quite pleasantly namechecked and shown by the project’s PI, so I was quite understandably chuffed. For those of us working on the instrument teams, the last few years of suppressing our own scientific output to get the instruments working has been well worth it – the bonus is that we get to be part of large consortia, doing mind-blowing, cutting edge science as a result.

One of the nice bonuses of conferences is the social aspects – dinner and trips to the pub, after long, long days in the conference hall, hits the spot quite nicely! Good people, good company, and great science – not a bad combination, at all.

Only one last day left for the ESLAB conference – to follow it, keep an eye on the Herschel mission blog (which I contribute to), or on Twitter, using the #eslab2010 tag.

(I was going to blog on the interesting post regarding scientists and data access to the community at large at the Galaxy Map blog, but Dave Clements already did a good job in responding. It’s a worthwhile discussion – check it out.

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Dunsink Observatory – a crying shame

October 24, 2009

It’s been a while, I must admit – life has been a tad busy with work on Herschel, with performance verification pretty much done (apart from one instrument) and science demonstration kicking off. It’s been pretty much non-stop since August, with me travelling quite a bit up and down to Oxfordshire for the majority of the week. So, unsurprisingly, not a lot of time has been free to update the blog, sadly.

For the last week, I’ve actually had some time off – I’m currently in Ireland on a bit of a busmans holiday. I came over to give a talk to the Irish Astronomical Society on Herschel last Monday night – we got a crowd of 25 or so up to Dunsink Observatory for the talk, and I think it went pretty well. It was odd being back at Dunsink, as I’d spent 18 months as a post-doc earlier in my career and had not been back in the 5+ years since.

Dunsink

The observatory is pretty much abandoned now – the internal politics and restructuring within the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies led to the academics moving into the Dublin city centre, leaving the Observatory empty. Now Irish science isn’t in the healthiest of states – astronomy in particular – but to leave a crown jewel like the Dunsink site to rot is unforgivable. The history of the site (luminaries such as Hamilton and Schrodinger worked there) plus the wonderful historical instruments (a 12″ Grubb refractor in particular) make it a *prime* site for a superb outreach facility for Irish astronomy and science in general. Apart from the sterling efforts of the IAS, the opportunities for using the site for science outreach are being sadly ignored by an increasingly short-sighted parent body and penny-pinching Government department – this sort of thing would *not* happen elsewhere in Europe.

Grubb Refractor

Instead, it is left there to rot. And sadly, that’s the way things happen in Ireland. It’ll be only when the Dunsink site is beyond saving that the powers that be will get up off their arses…. and then it’ll be too late.

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