Monthly Archives: January 2021

The ASCL at the 237th meeting of the American Astronomical Society

It’s that time of year again, when astronomers’ hearts and wings turn to AAS for the winter AAS meeting. This year, however, the wings are virtual; like other conferences in this time of pandemic, the 237th meeting of the AAS is online. I’m very impressed with the online meeting space, which includes a conference center with different locations to visit, a virtual exhibit hall, an iPoster gallery, and many opportunities through Slack and thoughtfully-planned activities to enable and encourage interaction between attendees, exhibitors, and presenters, including the always great Open Mic event, a highlight of the winter meeting, on Wednesday evening.

Members of the ASCL are presenting two iPosters + (the “plus” is a short Zoom session about  the poster) and an oral presentation at this meeting.

On Monday, Siddha Mavuram, an UMD student hired to do development work for the ASCL for our NASA ADAP project, is doing an iPoster + presentation titled Come search the ASCL with our new API! I also have an iPoster + presentation on Monday called Life, the Universe and Everything… you ever wanted to know about the Astrophysics Source Code Library. Though our short talks, using our posters only as our visual aids, are on Monday, our posters are available all week.

On Tuesday, Peter Teuben is presenting results of our NASA ADAP project. Though Siddha is presenting part of the development work done for this project, Peter is sharing the overall results in his oral presentation Increasing the visibility of NASA astrophysics software through the ASCL, showing how this project has made it possible to search the ASCL and ADS for NASA software through the use of keywords and, on ADS, the doctype value software. You can see these results yourself on the ASCL and with an ADS search.

Because I very cleverly failed to realize that all the links I added to the slides for my iPoster wouldn’t work once I made those slides images (doh!), I provide a PDF of these slides for download below in which most, but alas not all, of the links work. Later this week, I’ll provide a full list of links in another post that will contain all of the resources and links the ASCL is presenting this week.

Slides for Peter’s oral presentation (PDF)

Slides for Alice’s ASCL iPoster slideshow (PDF)

December 2020 additions to the ASCL

Twenty-six codes were added to the ASCL in December:

BinaryStarSolver: Orbital elements of binary stars solver
BlackHawk: Black hole evaporation calculator
dolphin: Automated pipeline for lens modeling
DRAGraces: Reduction pipeline for GRACES spectra

EinsteinPy: General Relativity and gravitational physics problems solver
EOS: Equation of State for planetary impacts
getsf: Multi-scale, multi-wavelength sources and filaments extraction
HCGrid: Mapping non-uniform radio astronomy data onto a uniformly distributed grid

HydroCode1D: 1D finite volume code
LALSuite: LIGO Scientific Collaboration Algorithm Library Suite
LIFELINE: LIne proFiles in massivE coLliding wInd biNariEs
MADLens: Differentiable lensing simulator

Magritte: 3D radiative transfer library
MLC_ELGs: Machine Learning Classifiers for intermediate redshift Emission Line Galaxies
NSCG: NOIRLab Source Catalog Generator
Pomegranate: Probabilistic model builder

PyXel: Astronomical X-ray imaging data modeling
Robovetter: Automatic vetting of Threshold Crossing Events (TCEs)
seaborn: Statistical data visualization
sedop: Optimize discrete versions of common SEDs

Sengi: Interactive viewer for spectral outputs from stellar population synthesis models
SimCADO: Observations simulator for infrared telescopes and instruments
Skye: Excess clustering of transit times detection
SLIT: Sparse Lens Inversion Technique

SWIGLAL: Access LALSuite libraries with Python and Octave scripts
TRAN_K2: Planetary transit search