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Colloquium

The colloquium is currently held at 3:45 PM on Tuesdays in Harriman 137. Cookies, tea and coffee are served from 3:30 PM outside the lecture hall.

Colloquium committee: Rouven Essig (Chair), Jennifer Cano (Vice Chair), Abhay Deshpande, Will Farr, Harold Metcalf, Jesus Perez Rios, Giacinto Piacquadio

Archive of colloquia from 1999 to the present


Fall 2024 Colloquia
Date Speaker Title & Abstract
Aug 27

Chang Kee Jung

Physics and Astronomy Department Chair
Stony Brook University

Chair's Colloquium


Sep 3

Rachel Bezanson

University of Pittsburgh

UNCOVERing astronomical gems from our backyard to the edges of the observable Universe


NASA's latest great flagship observatory, JWST, was built in part to reveal the earliest moments of cosmic history. In the 2 years since it began releasing data to the public, JWST has enthralled scientists and the public alike with the incredible images and spectroscopic information from astronomical objects as nearby as our solar system and beyond to the most distant reaches of the Universe. The astronomical community has set distance records, found galaxies that may be significantly larger than models suggest could exist, and demonstrated that in some cases galaxy and supermassive black hole formation was earlier and more rapid than we had ever expected. In this talk, I will highlight some of the exciting results from the UNCOVER (Ultradeep NIRSpec and NIRCam ObserVations before the Epoch of Reionization (https://jwst-uncover.github.io/) Treasury program. The UNCOVER program began in November 2022 with ultradeep NIRCam images of the Abell 2744 cluster ("Pandora's cluster") and within the same observing cycle targeted ~700 JWST-selected objects with deep NIRSpec PRISM spectra. These rich data have enabled spectroscopic studies of anticipated galaxy populations, including some of the most distant galaxies at cosmic dawn and the lowest mass systems that reionized the Universe. However, the same dataset has also revealed the unexpected, including extreme early supermassive black holes, dusty quiescent galaxies, and even low mass brown dwarfs in our own Milky Way. When combined with the multitude of additional multiwavelength data from other early JWST observations and HST, Chandra, ALMA, the VLT, etc., UNCOVER has helped to establish Abell 2744 as one of the premiere extragalactic fields.

Sep 10

Chiara Mingarelli

Yale

The NANOGrav Experiment: current results and future directions


Galaxy mergers are a standard aspect of galaxy formation and evolution, and most large galaxies contain supermassive black holes. As part of the merging process, the supermassive black holes should in-spiral together and eventually merge, generating a background of gravitational radiation in the nanohertz to microhertz regime. An array of precisely timed pulsars spread across the sky can form a galactic-scale gravitational wave detector in the nanohertz band. I describe the current efforts to develop and extend the pulsar timing array concept, together with recent evidence for a gravitational wave background, and efforts to constrain astrophysical phenomena at the heart of supermassive black hole mergers.

Sep 17

David Gross

KITP
UCSB

TBA.
Sep 24

Karsten Heeger

Yale

TBA.
Oct 1

Ken Dill

Stony Brook University

Origins of Life: Who knew it was a physics problem?


Oct 8

Eden Figueroa

Stony Brook University

TBA.
Oct 15 -- No Colloquium. Fall Break.
Oct 22

Stefano Spagna

Quantum Design

TBA.
Oct 29

Swati Singh

University of Delaware

TBA.
Nov 5 -- No Colloquium. Election Day.
Nov 12

Jesus Perez-Rios

Stony Brook University

TBA.
Nov 19

Eun-Ah Kim

Cornell

TBA.
Nov 26 -- No Colloquium. Thanksgiving Week.
Dec 3 -- TBA.

Archived Colloquium Schedules