| name | astronomy-cosmology |
| description | Analyzes astronomical observations and cosmological models including telescope data processing, celestial mechanics calculations, stellar evolution, galaxy classification, and cosmological parameter estimation; trigger when users discuss stars, galaxies, exoplanets, dark matter, or the universe's large-scale structure. |
When to Trigger
Activate this skill when the user mentions:
- Telescope observations, photometry, spectroscopy, astrometry
- Celestial mechanics, orbital calculations, Kepler's laws
- Stellar evolution, HR diagram, spectral classification
- Galaxy morphology, redshift, distance ladder
- Cosmological models, dark matter, dark energy, CMB
- Exoplanet detection, transit method, radial velocity
- Gravitational waves, black holes, neutron stars
Step-by-Step Methodology
- Define the astronomical question - Specify the object type (star, galaxy, nebula, exoplanet), observational band (optical, radio, X-ray, IR), and physical quantity of interest (distance, mass, luminosity, composition).
- Data acquisition - Identify relevant surveys and archives: Gaia for astrometry, SDSS for optical spectra/photometry, 2MASS/WISE for IR, Chandra for X-ray. Download data using VO (Virtual Observatory) tools or API queries.
- Calibration and reduction - Apply bias subtraction, flat-fielding, wavelength/flux calibration. For photometry: aperture or PSF fitting. For spectroscopy: sky subtraction, continuum normalization. Report signal-to-noise ratios.
- Physical parameter derivation - Compute distances (parallax, standard candles, redshift-distance relation using appropriate cosmology). Derive masses (Kepler's third law, virial theorem, mass-luminosity relation). Determine compositions from spectral line analysis.
- Modeling - Fit observational data with physical models: stellar atmosphere models (ATLAS, PHOENIX), N-body simulations for dynamics, cosmological models (LCDM, wCDM). Use MCMC or nested sampling for parameter estimation.
- Cosmological calculations - Use standard cosmological parameters (H0, Omega_m, Omega_Lambda). Compute comoving distances, lookback times, luminosity distances. Note current tensions (H0 tension between early and late universe).
- Visualization - Produce standard astronomical plots: HR diagrams, light curves, spectra, sky maps in appropriate coordinate systems (equatorial, galactic). Use logarithmic scales where appropriate.
Key Databases and Tools
- NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED) - Extragalactic object data
- SIMBAD / VizieR - Stellar object data and catalog queries
- Gaia Archive - Astrometric and photometric data
- SDSS SkyServer - Optical survey data
- NASA Exoplanet Archive - Confirmed exoplanet parameters
- Astropy - Python astronomy library
- MAST (STScI) - Hubble, JWST, and other mission archives
Output Format
- Coordinates in standard systems: RA/Dec (J2000) or Galactic (l, b).
- Distances with method and uncertainty (parallax, photometric, spectroscopic).
- Physical quantities in CGS or SI with astronomical conventions (solar units, parsecs, magnitudes).
- Spectra with wavelength/frequency axis, flux units, and line identifications.
Quality Checklist