Andrew Mann

212 Followers
76 Following
46 Posts
No longer here; find me on bluesky.
Homepagehttps://andrewwmann.com/
Is there some simulated #Euclid data for stars somewhere? Wanna see if I can do #mdwarf parameters with the #spectra #Astrodon #stars #coolstars #esa
ADAP in, time to start my XRP
I think the bird app might finally die for astronomers. It's so quiet over there #Astrodon
#academic mastadon, does anyone have any talks or resources on dealing with professional #jealousy in #academia? Esp #gradschool.
I'd like to talk to my team about it in a future group meeting. I have personal tips but would like to go beyond that.

My #ADAP is 2 pages over the limit, so I went through and edited a lot.

Now my ADAP is 3 pages over.
#astrodon #nasa #proposals

not pictured, the lab PI... oops.
New #research team #photo just dropped. #bestteam #science
is Twitter dead yet?
Can you find young stars, assign precise ages to groups, and find new groups all using Gaia photometric uncertainties? YES, YES YOU CAN. Read more here: https://arxiv.org/abs/2302.09084
Using the Gaia excess uncertainty as a proxy for stellar variability and age

Stars are known to be more active when they are young, resulting in a strong correlation between age and photometric variability. The amplitude variation between stars of a given age is large, but the age-variability relation becomes strong over large groups of stars. We explore this relation using the excess photometric uncertainty in Gaia photometry ($Var_{G}$, $Var_{BP}$, and $Var_{RP}$) as a proxy for variability. The metrics follow a Skumanich-like relation, scaling as $\simeq t^{-0.4}$. By calibrating against a set of associations with known ages, we show how $Var$ of population members can predict group ages within 10-20% for associations younger than $\simeq$2.5 Gyr. In practice, age uncertainties are larger, primarily due to finite group size. The index is most useful at the youngest ages ($<$100 Myr), where the uncertainties are comparable to or better than those derived from a color-magnitude diagram. The index is also widely available, easy to calculate, and can be used at intermediate ages where there are few or no pre- or post-main-sequence stars. We further show how $Var$ can be used to find new associations and test if a group of co-moving stars is a real co-eval population. We apply our methods on the Theia groups within 350 pc and find $\gtrsim$90% are inconsistent with drawing stars from the field and $\simeq$80% have variability ages consistent with those derived from the CMD. Our finding suggest the great majority of these groups contain real populations.

arXiv.org