茄子视频

Skip to main content

Calvin News

Student develops sophisticated astronomy software

Fri, Mar 21, 2014
Connor Sterchi

Last year, senior Dan Van Noord discovered a , which is akin to winning the astronomy lottery. Out of more than 100 billion stars in our galaxy, it鈥檚 estimated that only one million of them are subdwarf B鈥檚.

鈥淚t [Sub Dwarf B] consists of two stars: one is a very cool, small star, about a tenth the mass of our sun, and the other is about a quarter radius of our sun, but three or four times hotter and made of helium instead of hydrogen,鈥 Van Noord said. 鈥淭he system is extremely unusual. Subdwarf B鈥檚 are incredibly rare. And this one was extra special because it has a 95-minute orbital period. It takes 365 days for the Earth to go around the sun, these are two stars going around each other every 95 minutes.鈥

Leading his field

The particular subdwarf B found by Van Noord is the fastest known one in the universe. The astronomical find was announced at the at Michigan State University last summer. Since then, Van Noord has been working with an international team of astronomers to study the properties of the subdwarf B.

鈥淚鈥檓 currently leading the team to study it,鈥 Van Noord said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got data from the , people from South Carolina, a team from Germany working on a model. We鈥檙e hoping to have a paper out by the end of the summer summarizing this discovery and its orbital properties.鈥

During his time at Calvin, Van Noord has developed an enhanced and accessible computer program that tracks binary stars from archived data at Calvin College.

鈥淚t [the program] reads in a set of images, say 50 weeks ago for the course of a night, maps all the stars and all of the images, and finds out how they changed over the course of the night,鈥 Van Noord explained. 鈥淢ost of the changes are because the atmosphere has changed, there鈥檚 different amounts of clouds, or light from the moon, or light pollution, or an airplane flying in front of our telescope. So by getting rid of those changes, we鈥檙e able to look for changes that happen in the stars themselves.鈥

Speeding up discovery

The software has made the process considerably faster. About 3,000 times faster, in fact.

鈥淯sing the old [method] they found about 30 variable stars in 2008-2011,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n the first month of program testing I鈥檝e found 30 additional ones, and since then we鈥檝e well passed 200 now and are 鈥

When designing the program, Van Noord wanted to make something accessible, user-friendly, fun and interesting to use. These are characteristics missing in many other binary star programs that Van Noord has seen from other universities.

鈥淥ne of its big purposes is for students to get a chance to use it to look for their own variable stars,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 got a different experience. It鈥檚 not like you just feed a bunch of numbers into your computer, and your computer spits back a list. It鈥檚 capable of doing that, but that鈥檚 boring. It鈥檚 much more interesting to look at it, have it list the potential targets to look at, their light curve, how they change with time, and what [the program] thinks it is. That user experience is something I haven鈥檛 seen in anyone else鈥檚 software.鈥

Leaving a legacy

The software has already been used extensively. Students use it in lab projects at Calvin in Astronomy 110 and 211. In 2013, Van Noord went on the Astronomy in the Southwest interim trip to New Mexico, where his software was used by students in local high schools and middle schools.

鈥淗e鈥檚 made a big contribution here at Calvin to the ,鈥 said astronomy professor Steve Steenwyk. 鈥淗is contribution was quite significant to improving the rate of discovery, and actually he carried out an awful lot of analysis just in making these light curves and everything else.鈥

Van Noord, a double major in and with a minor in astronomy, has realized that the combination is the best of both worlds when it comes to researching, programming and developing astronomy software.

Combining two interests

鈥淚 was kind of tied between the two [computer science and physics] when I was coming to Calvin,鈥 Van Noord said. 鈥淏ut what I鈥檝e learned along the way is that those two majors have a lot in common, where skills from the one really help in skills from the other. It鈥檚 a pretty rare skill set to focus on both of those things at once.鈥

鈥淚 think Dan will have a future, because that鈥檚 his interest and passion, using developing software, using computers, to be able to analyze and crunch the data related to astronomy,鈥 Steenwyk said. 鈥淗e brings the two skills together in one package: the interest and knowledge of astronomy, and the interest and ability to write software and do something with the data.鈥

Van Noord鈥檚 interest in astronomy and binary stars has deep roots. Back in high school, he competed in , a science competition for high school students.

鈥淭he focus in astronomy [for Science Olympiad] was variable stars for three years I was in high school,鈥 Van Noord said, 鈥渟o I was learning about variable stars and liked it. And when I came to Calvin I didn鈥檛 actually know this, but they were researching variable stars here, so I got really excited, and when they said you can find your own variable star, that made me even more excited.鈥

By the end of the academic year, Van Noord hopes to launch a website that has his software available so that anyone in the world can upload data and process the results.