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Version 127 (modified by Ralph Hofferbert, 9 years ago) (diff)

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The AstroTechTalk (ger) offers a place to discuss, for all interested colleagues and especially for the technical departments, the project leaders, the administration and the scientists as the ultimately users:

  • status of instrumentation projects
  • scientific tasks and features of the instruments in construction or planned
  • new possible involvements
  • technical innovations and developments
  • technical problems and their solutions
  • logistical problems and their solutions
  • how to improve operation and observation
  • project standards.

Time: Always Fridays 11:00 - 12:00

Location: Hörsaal

Outline:

  • Announcements (news, visitors, etc.) (mainly in German)
  • Talk of about 30 min about a selected topic (German or English, will be announced)
  • Follow up discussion and questions (German or English, depending on the speaker)


Please send proposals for talks via e-mail to: gaessler, hofferbert - or also available in room 021 or 211.

Date Speaker Topic
18.09.2015 Martin Kuerster How big is the universe?

Most astronomers believe that the size of the universe is infinite. But how certain can we be about this? When trying to answer this question we attempt to make a statement about the world as a whole, about the biggest entity that we can imagine. This can only succeed, if we can assume that the behaviour of the universe at large equals the behaviour that we know from our cosmic neighbourhood and that it also was the same at earlier times. This means that the same laws of nature must be valid at any time and everywhere, which cannot be taken for granted.

A journey to increasingly larger distances and earlier times will provide an overview of the known universe. The talk will outline the way astronomers measure distances in the universe. Starting off from its origin in the extreme physical state that we call "big bang" the evolution of the universe will be illustrated.

Presentation: German
Slides: German
Questions: German, English
25.09.2015 Markus Feldt SPHERE - Lessons learned

This talk discusses some of the project-related findings, which emerged during design, construction and commissioning of the SPHERE instrument.
Rather than presenting the usual summary of successfully accomplished milestones, the focus is more on failures during project execution. But also correctly implemented things help to learn for the future...

Mainly the MPIA contributions will be handled (data reduction software, ADCs, detector positioning unit) extended by some analyses of the overall project execution. Markus Feldt will very briefly also address the loss of the competition phase during the pre-SPHERE period.

For sure, some of the findings are not new and some of the failures were repeated from other projects. For some of the undesirable developments there are no easy solutions - often the opinions of how to tackle a problem are controversial. This makes the communication of possible root causes of nasty errors even more important and helps to find corrective actions and countermeasures.

Presentation: German
Slides: German
Questions: German, English
02.10.2015 Kai Noeske The history of light in the universe

Nearly all visible light is created in the outer layer of stars. Therefore, the visible light of the universe explains the history of a star and when it was born.

We will learn how the birth of stars is connected with large structures of matter and the galaxies. The understanding of the history and the birth of stars plays a key role in understanding the universe and its evolution. This knowledge explains the assembly of structure in dark matter, tells us about physics behind the birth of stars and gas in galaxies and helps to understand the creation of heavy chemical elements, which finally lead to the generation of earth like planets and the live on it.

As of late, the history of stars can be observed with large telescopes from ground and space up to more than 12 billion years into the past and in short even to a 100 million years after the big bang. These observations are accompanied by enormous computer simulations to understand the physics in the stars and in the Galaxies better and better.

Presentation: German
Slides: German
Questions: German, English
09.10.2015 Coryn Bailer-Jones Astronomical threats to the Earth
16.10.2015 Klaus Jaeger TBD
23.10.2015 Joerg-Uwe Pott MICADO
30.10.2015 Joerg Hoffmann Our institute's work doctor talks (once more) about
"Medical aspects of stay at high altitude (like e.g. Paranal, Mt. Graham)" and
"Prevention and vaccinations when traveling abroad"
06.11.2015 Klaus Meisenheimer PANIC - Lessons learned?
13.11.2015 Diethard Peter Hologramms and their use
20.11.2015 still vacant
27.11.2015 Natalie Fischer Planetarium show, Haus der Astronomie
04.12.2015 Dietrich Lemke Dark lines in the spectrum of the sun
11.12.2015 -- Christmas party
18.12.2015 still vacant
25.12.2015 -- Christmas

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Presentations from 01.01-31.07.2015

Presentations from 12.09-31.12.2014:

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