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17 Jul 2024 |
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Charlie | Quick question - I teach high school Honors Physics, plus an advanced course in Computational Physics. I include coding and have used materials from Astropy over the past few years. My question: does anyone have a favorite intro lesson, or lessons, that students might enjoy. I'll be at Fermilab over the next week developing lessons with others using Jupyter notebooks, and I'd love to incorporate more astronomy/astrophysics. All work would be properly cited. Thank you! | 21:35:26 |
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18 Jul 2024 |
Julie Imig | MAST (Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes - the data center for Hubble, Webb and more) has a lot of publicly available jupyter notebooks that teach the basics of how to find and work with astronomical data. The "Hello Universe" set of notebooks in particular might interest you, as they include some basic machine learning principles in there too:
• MAST Notebooks: https://spacetelescope.github.io/mast_notebooks/intro.html
• Hello Universe Notebooks: https://archive.stsci.edu/hello-universe | 14:30:37 |
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19 Jul 2024 |
the_guruji | In reply to @slack_astropy_ULPSGSSEN:openastronomy.org Quick question - I teach high school Honors Physics, plus an advanced course in Computational Physics. I include coding and have used materials from Astropy over the past few years. My question: does anyone have a favorite intro lesson, or lessons, that students might enjoy. I'll be at Fermilab over the next week developing lessons with others using Jupyter notebooks, and I'd love to incorporate more astronomy/astrophysics. All work would be properly cited. Thank you! There's the GROWTH summer school notebooks (https://github.com/growth-astro/growth-school-2020). | 17:36:58 |
22 Jul 2024 |
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23 Jul 2024 |
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Charlie | Thank you for the responses! I've shared these sites with other teachers and will utilize much of this with students as well as in workshops! Anything else will also be appreciated. | 15:47:08 |
26 Jul 2024 |
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pllim | https://www.npr.org/2024/07/23/nx-s1-5048828/chandra-x-ray-observatory-nasa-powerful-telescope-anniversary 😿 | 18:20:20 |