Diana Ferrus Talk
Discovery of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation: Looking Back 50 Years
We will have Robert Stokes talking about the early history of cosmic microwave background measurements. In the late 60s, Robert was a graduate student at Princeton working with David Wilkinson (the W in WMAP) on measuring the spectrum of CMB. He will have interesting stories to tell about the early days of CMB discovery.
Eco-Lunch Seminar
Speaker: Matthew Klooster, PhD
Eco-Lunch Seminar
Speaker: Sarah Bray, PhD
Eco-Lunch Seminar
Speaker: Scott Shreve, PhD
Eco-Lunch Seminar
Speaker: Rebecca Fox, PhD
Eco-Lunch Seminar
Speaker: Charles Brown, PhD
Your textbook is still wrong about the Milky Way galaxy
Fifteen years ago, we modeled the distribution of stars in the Milky Way
using three components: an exponential disk, a power law spheroid, and a
bulge. Then, we discovered the distribution of stars in the spheroid
was lumpy due to the accretion and tidal disruption of dwarf galaxies
that ventured too close the the Galactic center. We now wonder whether
the Milky Way has a classical bulge at all; likely the bulge-like
feature we see is instead due to the Galactic bar. And most recently,
we are discovering large scale departures from the standard exponential
disk. New discoveries point to variations in the expected bulk
velocities of stars in the Galactic disk, and oscillations in the
spatial densities of disk stars. Some believe these observations point
to a wave response to the passing of dwarf galaxies (or dark matter
lumps) through the Milky Way's disk. These waves may also explain the
observed rings of stars, 15-25 kpc from the Galactic center, which is
farther out than we originally believed the disk to extend.
Refreshments will be served in CP 179 at 3:15 PM