• Observing

    November 17th, 2009

    By Steven

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    The Chilean Pea hunt continues…

    You may have noticed the Galaxy Zoo blog was down over the weekend. Well, it wasn’t the only one to be experiencing technical difficulties. On Sunday night we unfortunately lost four hours of observing time to technical gremlins. First we tried to use a new filter, which resulted in a nice 10 minute exposure of nothing. After a trip to the telescope to look around inside the instrument, the support staff worked out the problem: the filter was mislabelled on the computer. With that figured out, we changed to the correct filter and carried on – only to be stopped in our tracks again a couple of hours later by the whole telescope control system crashing! This time it took three hours of methodical troubleshooting to fix the problem, apparently some problem with a power lead. By then the night was almost over.

    The lost time was a particular shame because the observing conditions were so good while we were out of action. Oh well, these things happen. Indeed, they are pretty much inevitable with a system as complicated and delicate as a professional telescope. Thankfully the support staff here are very good at tracking down issues and solving them quickly.

    During the half of the night we were able to use, we managed to look at three z-Pea candidates, and confirmed two of them. The z-Peas are a bit redder and further away than the i-Peas we were observing on the two previous nights. Again we weren’t sure beforehand that the objects we’d selected would really turn out to be what we were hoping for, so it was a big relief when we measured their redshifts to be exactly where we expected.

    So that was Sunday night. Now it’s Tuesday morning and technical niggles have now been well and truly put behind us. We’ve just had an excellent night, managing to observe five faint candidates, all of which turned out to be z-Peas! We have one more night on the telescope, which we are going to use to get better data for a few examples from the objects we’ve already confirmed – so we can learn more about them than just how far away they are, such as how fast they are forming stars and how much metals they contain.

    This entry was posted on Tuesday, November 17th, 2009 at 9:29 am and is filed under Observing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
  • 7 Comments

    Take a look at some of the responses we have had to this article.

    1. Nov 17th

      Sorry to hear about the tech problems but glad they didn’t completely halt your endeavors. Assuming your targets are within the SDSS footprint, can you please post the object ID’s so we can follow along?

    2. rick n.
      Nov 17th

      Technical issues are always going to take up time, usually when you don’t have much of it! As a friend said when this was first announced: “Five nights! Why only five nights? This is important!”

      Some snaps of a few of the original Peas would be welcome…

    3. Nov 17th

      Grrrr! Better luck for tonight and all the following nights! Ah well, I suppose these things never are easy peasy.

      (ducks and runs)

    4. Hope you have better luck with the pea hunting !

      JKHC.

    5. Feb 9th

      Ah, great! This cleared up some contradictions I’ve heard.

    6. Stephen Taylor
      Jun 5th

      Goodday I have a problem,my Galaxy classification page has changed to a forein language.can someone help me please.

    7. Jun 6th

      There is a flag in the top left corner of the site. Click it to change language (current options are English and Polish).

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