I post this here because these tutorials might be useful to others. Frank
Hi Alex,
Yes I totally agree that the database can be a really good teaching tool. I used this in a tutorial for advanced high school students (Teen Astronomy Cafe). You might find the attached links useful. These depend only on two available tools - aladin and topcat.
TAC Part 1:
http://dec01.tuc.noao.edu/NHPPS_DATA/Allen/doc/TAC1802/Part1.html
TAC Part 2:
http://dec01.tuc.noao.edu/NHPPS_DATA/Allen/doc/TAC1802/Part2.html
Yours,
Frank
On Mar 12, 2019, at 9:14 PM, Alex Drlica-Wagner <kadrlica@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Frank,
I was actually preparing a short tutorial on asteroid detection using
catalogs from the DES single-epoch supernova visits. I was just using
your asteroid catalog to "cheat" and choose exposures where I knew the
students would be able to find bright-ish asteroids. Your catalog has
already proven very successful for this (much easier that trying to
find Planet 9...).
I don't think I need any help from your side, I just wanted to make
sure you were aware of this "feature". I had also noticed the large
x/y values, but I assumed they could be relative to CRPIX rather than
the single CCD, though your answer makes more sense.
Best,
Alex