00:05:38 Stephen Pribut: I don’t see victor’s screen 00:06:05 Jim Tomney: I see it - maybe try logging back in? 00:06:28 Stephen Pribut: Ok the interface of zoom was odd with a zoom workplace. 00:08:38 Stephen Pribut: Thanks, Jim. Magic. It worked. 00:08:48 Jim Tomney: Reacted to "Thanks, Jim. Magic. ..." with 👍 01:06:54 Harrini: How can you observe different stars without taking the the same star over and over again? 01:16:01 Wayne: Replying to "How can you observe ..." I don't understand the question. Can you try again? 01:22:51 Harrini: Thank you for answering my question 01:28:20 Al: How do you avoid data transmission /reception contamination ? In other words how do you know the data you are interpreting is pure . Is there a zero point reference that you have to calibrate your digital data equipment frequently ? And does that change for every planet you observe . Thanks 01:30:05 Jeff: Fantastic presentation THANK YOU 01:30:54 Wayne: Replying to "How do you avoid dat..." Are you asking about data transmission/reception problems, like flipped bits? 01:31:30 Al: Thanks for a great presentation 01:33:38 Reza Ashtari: Reacted to "Fantastic presentati..." with ❤️ 01:33:40 Reza Ashtari: Reacted to "Thanks for a great ..." with ❤️ 01:41:46 Al: Replying to "How do you avoid dat..." no , mostly proper signals being interpreted as nose and vice versa in searching for habitable planets 01:41:53 Al: Replying to "How do you avoid dat..." noise 01:43:13 Jeff: What was the setup? 01:46:10 Wayne: Replying to "How do you avoid dat..." @Al Oh, OK. The Space Telescope Science Institute maintains calibration files for every instrument and filter combinations. Those are used in most cases to perform the data calibration. Some scientists will look at the calibration data and optimize it for their needs, but that is not terribly common. 01:48:26 Al: Replying to "How do you avoid dat..." Thank You