
I have a student who is looking for a physics database where she can find the stellar mass and luminosity for at least 30 stars. She found some random dudes free website that sort of has the data. But it does not seem like the most academic site. There has to be a science foundation or a university that has this sort of database. Anyone have any insight? Links? :) Thanks- Klaudia -- *International Academy* www.iatoday.org <http://www.iatoday.org>

I'd link her up with staff at one of Michigan's planetariums-- or an Astronomy prof at Wayne State maybe-- for their recommendations. On Wed, Aug 23, 2023 at 10:03 AM Klaudia Janek via Michlib-l < michlib-l@mcls.org> wrote:
I have a student who is looking for a physics database where she can find the stellar mass and luminosity for at least 30 stars.
She found some random dudes free website that sort of has the data. But it does not seem like the most academic site. There has to be a science foundation or a university that has this sort of database. Anyone have any insight? Links? :)
Thanks- Klaudia
*International Academy*
www.iatoday.org
_______________________________________________ Michlib-l mailing list Michlib-l@mcls.org https://mail3.mcls.org/mailman/listinfo/michlib-l
-- Jean Fellows (she/hers) Programming Coordinator Grand Ledge Area District Library 131 E. Jefferson St., Grand Ledge, MI 48837 517-627-7014 *The Grand Ledge Area District Library is situated on ancestral, traditional and contemporary lands of the Anishinaabeg – Three Fires Confederacy of Ojibwe, Odawa and Potawatomi peoples-- land ceded in the 1819 Treaty of Saginaw. For more information, see the article from Central Michigan University Library:https://blogs.cmich.edu/library/2019/11/26/the-1819-treaty-of-saginaw/#:~:te.... <https://blogs.cmich.edu/library/2019/11/26/the-1819-treaty-of-saginaw/#:~:text=In%20the%201819%20treaty%2C%20the,living%20on%20the%20ceded%20territory.>*

Hello Klaudia, I would recommend arXiv.org (https://arxiv.org/) through Cornell University. Not always the easiest thing to search on site, but I believe it is fully indexed by Google so they can always search Google with "site: arxiv.org" and get results. More info: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArXiv Cheers, Steven On Wed, Aug 23, 2023 at 10:03 AM Klaudia Janek via Michlib-l < michlib-l@mcls.org> wrote:
I have a student who is looking for a physics database where she can find the stellar mass and luminosity for at least 30 stars.
She found some random dudes free website that sort of has the data. But it does not seem like the most academic site. There has to be a science foundation or a university that has this sort of database. Anyone have any insight? Links? :)
Thanks- Klaudia
*International Academy*
www.iatoday.org
_______________________________________________ Michlib-l mailing list Michlib-l@mcls.org https://mail3.mcls.org/mailman/listinfo/michlib-l
-- *Steven Kish* *Reference LibrarianLawrence Technological University Library* *Email <library@ltu.edu>, call <2482043000>or 24/7 chat with <https://libguides.ltu.edu/247help> the LTU Library (fastest)* *Direct email: skish@ltu.edu <skish@ltu.edu> (will reply my next scheduled shift)*
participants (3)
-
Jean Fellows
-
Klaudia Janek
-
Steven Kish