Astrophysics Seminar Series
 
Fall 2005

All seminars are held on Wednesdays at 2pm (unless otherwise noted) in the Bloomberg Hall Astrophysics Library.


Date
Speaker
Title
September
14
Stefano Zibetti
(Max-Planck-Institut)
Very deep photometry with the SDSS:
the image stacking approach
21
Jason Prochaska
(Univ. of California)
The SDSS Survey for High Redshift Neutral Gas
26

Mike Kuhlen
(Univ. of California)
Carbon Ignition in Type Ia Supernovae
October
3

Yannick Mellier
(IAP-Paris)
The CFHT Legacy Survey
5
Bruce Partridge
(Haverford / IAS)
The Youngest Extragalactic Radio Sources
12 Kristen Menou
(Columbia)
Differential Rotation in Stars
13

Henk Spruit
(MPA)
The Nature of Magnetic Fields in A-stars,  White Dwarfs and Magnetars
19
Daniel Babich
(Harvard University)
Testing Inflation: non-Gaussianity and the Epoch of Reionization
26
Shane Davis
(UCSB)
How do black hole accretion accretion disks radiate?
November
2
Mario Juric
(Princeton)
Streams, clumps and smooth models: The Milky Way structure with SDSS
9
Gabriel Rockefeller
(Arizona)
The Supernova Remnant Sgr A East and its Impact on Sgr A*
21
Juna Kollmeier
(Ohio State Univ.)
Multi-Scale Growth of Cosmic Structure
30
Margaret Pan
(Caltech)
Shaping the Kuiper belt size spectrum
December
5
(Mon. 2pm!!)
Martin Pessah
(Arizona)
Modeling Angular Momentum Transport in Turbulent Magnetized Accretion Disks
7
Mateusz Ruszkowski
(Colorado)
TBA

For more information contact Andrew MacFadyen (aim [at] ias.edu) or Zheng Zheng (zhengz [at] ias.edu)


Other Semesters:

2003-2004:   Fall   Spring

2004-2005:   Fall   Spring

2005-2006:   Fall   Spring

2006-2007:   Fall   Spring

2007-2008:   Fall   Spring  

2008-2009:   Fall   Spring  

2009-2010:   Fall   Spring  

2010-2011:   Fall   Spring  

2011-2012:   Fall   Spring  

2012-2013:   Fall   Spring  

2013-2014:   Fall   Spring  

2014-2015:   Fall   Spring  

2015-2016:   Fall   Spring  

2016-2017:   Fall    



Revised September, 2005; Address questions and comments about this server to webmaster@sns.ias.edu
backBack to the Astrophysics Main Page