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Monday, 2 April 2018

ARIES Training School in Observational Astronomy (ATSOA) 2018 - Day 1

Day 1
19th March, 07:30am. 
I was ready with my bags to join the ten days school at ARIES, Nainital - ARIES Training School in Observational Astronomy (ATSOA) 2018 . Luckily it takes only an hour to reach ARIES by car. I looked out of the car window only once or twice during the journey and then I saw the ARIES check-post. Students were already there near the auditorium. I asked where to put my bags. After taking my bags downstairs in the room adjacent to the dining hall, I walked towards the Auditorium. The first lecture was by Prof. Hum Chand. After the welcome talk by ARIES director Dr. Anil Kumar Pandey he talked about celestial coordinates. Next lecture was given by Dr. Brijesh Kumar. He introduced himself as an Optical Astronomer at ARIES and told us about different concepts related to telescopes like focal ratio, plate scale, fast vs. slow telescopes etc. He also told us to read about how our eyes work because no telescope or detector is as good as our eyes. After these two lectures, we came out of the hall for a short break of tea and biscuits. 

The door to the Dining
Hall
Trees as viewed from
outside our rooms




During the tea break, we used to stand outside the auditorium and look at the beautiful site. I used to wonder while watching cars on the road that how small they appear and how small we are as compared to these hills and how small they are as compared to the size of Earth.





In the next lecture, Prof. Amitesh Omar told us about how detectors are arranged in a telescope. He talked for an hour only using the two chalkboards in the hall without any powerpoint slides. For lunch, we walked to the dining hall and after that, we had to attend one more lecture by Anjasha Mam who is the Senior Research Fellow at ARIES. I realized later that what she talked in an hour was equivalent to what we did in the data analysis sessions in the computer lab for a week! Her talk was on photometry and how the IRAF software is used to do image cleaning, processing and then photometry. After her talk, we were divided into groups of four or five students under the guidance of a Ph.D. scholar. Our guide was Rakesh Pandey sir, SRF at ARIES. I met with group members.  

I had only read that telescopes use CCD detectors and the data or image from it can be cleaned using different software including IRAF. I was unfamiliar with the commands used to process or clean the image. 

After a little conversation, all of us headed to see the 104cm Sampurnanand Telescope. It’s really awesome to watch the dome and telescope moving. The CCD used in the telescope has 1300×1340 pixels i.e. it’s a rectangular CCD and not a square one.


Auditorium


104cm Telescope with dome open


104cm Telescope with the dome closed

But the best part of the day came when I saw loads and loads of stars at night. The lights from the faraway houses were also beautiful. It was very very very cold. I can tell this because my roommates were shivering. I was not feeling very cold because I was wearing a lot of clothes plus a jacket with the hood cap and a shawl. I used to remain packed because I knew that I get cold very easily. We spent some time near the auditorium and talked about stars and constellation then we walked to the dining hall and to our rooms.

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