Colloquia Schedule Fall 2014
Colloquia are on Tuesdays (unless otherwise indicated) at 3:30 pm in RLM 15.216B
"Hot Chromospheres and Flares on Cool and Ultracool Dwarfs" Ohio State University host: Adam Kraus |
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"Let it Collide: An Epic Saga of Star Wars Planets, Planetesimals, and Super Planet Crashes" University of Texas at Austin host: Adam Kraus |
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"The Complex Interplay between Star Formation and Galaxy Evolution from z~0-6" Haverford College host: Steve Finkelstein |
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"Compact Galaxies and Super-Massive Black Holes" Max Planck Institute for Astronomy (MPIA), Heidelberg host: Karl Gebhardt |
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"The Architecture and Timing of Planetary Systems" University of Chicago host: TBD |
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"Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Supermassive Black Hole?" Pennsylvania State University host: Steve Finkelstein |
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"Puzzles in the Structure of Disk Galaxies" Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada host: Karl Gebhardt |
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"Galaxy Build-up in the First Gyr: Insights from ultra-deep HST and Spitzer Observations" Yale University host: Steve Finkelstein |
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"Forming Earths and Mercuries: Solids Less Volatile than Ice" American Museum of Natural History, New York host: Joel Green |
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"Shedding Lyman Alpha Light on Cosmological Reionization" Arizona State University host: Steve Finkelstein |
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"From Disks to Planets: Observational Insights" Rice University host: Adam Kraus |
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"The Giant Magellan Telescope Project: Science and Status" Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) host: Taft Armandroff |
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"There's Government in Your Science" American Astronomical Society host: Jeff Silverman |
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DeVaucouleurs Medalist DeVaucouleurs Lecture: "The Growth of Supermassive Black Holes and Galaxy Evolution" Yale University dinner host: Shardha Jogee (Medal Awarded by Daniel Jaffe) |
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DeVaucouleurs Medalist Public Lecture: "Black Holes, Galaxies and the Evolution of the Universe: An Observer's View" Yale University dinner host: Daniel Jaffe |
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DeVaucouleurs Medalist UT CNS Women in Science Lecture: "Why So Few? The Dearth of Women in Science" Women continue to be underrepresented in STEM fields (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics), and the gender imbalance is particularly large in physics, where fewer than 20% of college physics majors are women and only 10% of physics faculty are women. Interestingly, astronomy requires more or less the same skills as physics but has roughly double the percentages of women at all levels, indicating the influence of factors beyond scientific/quantitative talent. Decades of social science research suggest the dearth of women is due in large part to lower expectations and evaluations of women as leaders, thinkers, do-ers. I discuss the experimental data and outline steps that can be taken to mitigate obstacles to equal participation, full utilization of available talent being critical to the health of STEM professions. Yale University dinner host: Dean Linda Hicke |
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"Brown Dwarfs as Exoplanet Analogs" Bucknell University, Lewisburg PA host: Adam Kraus |
Visitors to the Department of Astronomy can find detailed information and maps on our Visiting Austin Page.
Please report omissions/corrections to: G. Orris at argus@astro.as.utexas.edu.
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