Radio Telescope Instrumentation For Teaching
Sobre o livro
The book will provide detailed descriptions of radio astronomy instrumentation projects
that have fared well in the classroom and/or in student research experiences. The projects
will be easily replicable or directly accessible to the larger community.
The focus of the book will be on undergraduate education, but the content will also have
relevance for high-school education and for the amateur astronomy world. The target
audience is researchers working with undergraduates, or other educational professionals working with students, who already have a basic familiarity with radio astronomy and
radio telescopes. The text, then, is for educators, but not a textbook for the students
involved in their research projects. For pedagogically-minded faculty who wish to embark
on a radio astronomy instrumentation project in a lab course or in a summer research
setting, it can be difficult to know where to start as opposed to a more common
laboratory procedure like setting up a laser experiment on an optical bench. Of course,
radio telescope kits exist, but frequently change and/or become difficult to acquire. For
those standalone systems, detailed descriptions will be presented in the text beyond what
is currently publicly available, with procedures applicable beyond the immediately
showcased telescopes.
Key Features:
- First book dedicated to developing radio astronomy projects in the classroom
- Gives the instructor a starting point for a variety of classroom projects
- Describes how rapid advances in computing have enabled locally-built radio telescopes to be accessible to undergraduate students
- Contains case studies, Jupyter notebooks and Interactive circuit diagrams