đź”§ Essential Tools for Observational Astronomy
Below are a few essential tools for observational astronomy:
Aladin is essentially Google Maps for the sky. This powerful visualization tool allows you to explore astronomical images from a vast array of surveys and flip seamlessly between them.
- The web-based Aladin Lite is a great place to start, offering quick access to many surveys.
- For full capabilities—including custom data ingestion and access to a much broader archive—install the desktop version.
TOPCAT (Tools for OPerations on Catalogues And Tables) is a powerful Java-based GUI application for manipulating large astronomical tables.ps://www.star.bris.ac.uk/~mbt/topcat/
- Excellent for cross-matching catalogs, visualizing large datasets, and exploring parameter spaces.
- Unparalleled in its flexibility and speed when working with large tables.
VizieR is an interface for querying a vast library of astronomical catalogs via cone search.
- Great for quickly identifying sources near given coordinates.
- Check out its SED builder to construct spectral energy distributions using catalog photometry.
SIMBAD links sky objects to existing literature.of the color-magnitude diagram).
- Particularly helpful for assessing how well-studied a target is.
- Keep in mind: some entries (e.g., Gaia white dwarfs) may have a reference but little in-depth study—SIMBAD flags existence, not depth.
Astrophysics Data System (ADS):
ADS is the go-to platform for searching astronomical literature.
- Search by author, title, topic, or publication date.
- Many researchers use ADS libraries to organize papers and track their own work.
đź’» Computing resources:
Our group makes use of several high-performance computing environments:
Engaging Cluster @ MIT
We own four nodes on the Engaging cluster (partition: sched_mit_kburdge_r8). Each node includes:
- 4Ă— A100 80GB SXM GPUs (NVLinked)
- 128 CPU cores (256 threads)
- 512 GB RAM
- MKI also maintains two similar nodes under the
sched_mit_mki_r8partition.
Group storage on Engaging located at: /orcd/data/kburdge/001/
2. MIT Supercloud
The Supercloud cluster offers excellent CPU/GPU allocations, plus support through tutorials and office hours. Accounts are available for MIT researchers.
3. Physics-Wide subMIT Cluster
subMIT is open to all Physics Department members.
- Features extensive CPU and GPU resources.
- Great for mid-scale parallel jobs or quick batch processing.

