by Katherine Rosenfeld | Jun 29, 2011 | Daily Paper Summaries
Corroboration and confirmation is the name of this game. Making the same measurement twice — using a different technique — is a powerful way not only to confirm the initial result, but also the method used. This paper confirms a recent detection of a binary system using light-travel time techniques.
by Elisabeth Newton | Jun 9, 2011 | Daily Paper Summaries
How do stars vary on a hundred year time scale? The DASCH (Digital Access to a Sky Century @ Harvard) Team has been looking back at data taken over the last century in order to answer this question. This paper reports the most recent DASCH discovery, which concerns the star KU Cyg. This is an eclipsing binary system in which a more massive F star is gaining mass from a red giant. The authors noticed a 0.5 magnitude drop in the brightness of the star around 1900 that lasts for five years.
by Katherine Rosenfeld | Jan 19, 2011 | Daily Paper Summaries
With the advent of large photometric surveys, Astronomers must often work through massive amounts of data. One solution to deal with these large numbers is to train computers to do the job. This paper discusses such a computer algorithm to select candidate quasi-stellar objects (QSOs), the bright nuclei of galaxies that each house a supermassive black hole.