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Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures « Astronomical Society
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Silicon Valley Astronomy Lectures

Life at the Edge: Life in Extreme Environments on Earth and the Search for Life in the Universe

Dr. Lynn RothschildNovember 11, 2009

Dr. Lynn Rothschild (NASA Ames Research Center)

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Astrobiologist Lynn Rothschild has gone from the Bolivian Andes to the Rift Valley of Kenya searching for the hardiest of organisms in the most extreme environments for life. By getting to know life forms on Earth that can occupy the most hostile niches, we can begin to understand the survival requirements for life in general. She describes her quest for “life at the edge” and how such discoveries will shape our search for life in the Solar System and beyond.

 

Hubble Breakthrough: The First Photos of a Planet Orbiting Another Star

Dr. Paul KalasOctober 7, 2009

Dr. Paul Kalas (University of California, Berkeley)

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Paul Kalas was the leader of the team who managed the long-sought feat of actually taking a photograph of a planet orbiting another star. Before this, all the planets outside our solar system were found by indirect means. He describes how they achieved the breakthrough, using the Hubble Space Telescope, and discusses the wide range of planets out there that astronomers are discovering.

 

The Dark Side of the Universe: Dark Matter and Dark Energy

Dr. Patricia BurchatMay 20, 2009

Dr. Patricia Burchat (Stanford University)

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In the last decade or so, astronomers have been forced to accept two mysterious observations. About a quarter of the universe is made of “dark matter,” which attracts things with its gravity, but is otherwise invisible. And roughly two-thirds of the universe is composed of “dark energy,” which causes space itself to expand at an ever-increasing rate. That means only a small fraction of the universe is made of ordinary matter — the stuff we understand! In this non-technical presentation, Dr. Burchat explores the evidence for the dark side of the cosmos, and the experiments that are being developed to investigate it further.

 

Planetary Protection and Hitchhikers in the Solar System: The Danger of Mingling Microbes

Dr. Margaret RaceApril 22, 2009

Dr. Margaret Race (SETI Institute)

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Scientists searching for life elsewhere have to worry about avoiding harmful cross contamination during the exploration of planets and their moons. We don’t want to take Earth microbes to Mars or bring back alien microbes to Earth. In this timely talk, Dr. Race gives a behind-the-scenes view of “environmental management” planning for solar system missions, and explains the role of the Outer Space Treaty and other related national and international policies in planning our hunt for life-forms out there.

 

The Dawn of Creation: The First Two Billion Years

Dr. Stephen BeckwithMarch 4, 2009

Dr. Stephen Beckwith (University of California)

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All the great islands of stars got their start in the first billion years after the beginning of time, the Big Bang. Every deep picture of the sky reveals thousands of these galaxies, each made up of billions of stars like the Sun. Modern instruments like the Hubble Space Telescope have made it possible to look back to a time when the universe looked very different that it does today. Dr. Beckwith discusses some of the deepest images of the universe ever taken and shares recent discoveries about the early days of the cosmos.

 

Prospecting for Water on the Moon: The Upcoming LCROSS Mission

Dr. Anthony ColapreteJanuary 21, 2009

Dr. Anthony Colaprete (NASA Ames Research Center)

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In 2009, NASA will purposely crash two spacecraft into one of the Moon’s polar regions. The impacts should raise huge plumes of material, visible even to smaller telescopes on Earth. Dr. Colaprete, the Principal Investigator for this intriguing mission, fills us in on why scientists believe there is water in deep craters at the Moon’s poles and how the LCROSS mission plans to look for it in the plumes.

 

Saturn’s Restless Rings: Latest Results from the Cassini Mission

Dr. Mark ShowalterNovember 12, 2008

Dr. Mark Showalter (SETI Institute)

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NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has entered its fifth year exploring the planet Saturn, its rings, and its moons. Dr. Showalter, a key member of the Cassini science team, shares some of the marvelous results from Saturn and recent discoveries from the mission. His special focus is Saturn’s complex and beautiful ring system (which shows a variety of surprising phenomena, including “jets”, “propellers”, “wisps”, “spokes”, and “braids”) and the remarkable interactions between Saturn’s rings and moons.

 

 

The Black Hole Wars: My Battle with Stephen Hawking

Dr. Leonard SusskindOctober 1, 2008

Dr. Leonard Susskind (Stanford University)

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Black holes, the collapsed remnants of the largest stars, provide a remarkable laboratory where the frontier concepts of our understanding of nature are tested at their extreme limits. For more than two decades, Professor Susskind and a Dutch colleague have had a running battle with Stephen Hawking about the implications of black hole theory for our understanding of reality — a battle that he has described in his well-reviewed book The Black Hole Wars. In this talk Dr. Susskind tells the story of these wars and explains the ideas that underlie the conflict. What’s at stake is nothing less than our understanding of space, time, matter and information!

 

The Allen Telescope Array: The Newest Pitchfork for Exploring the Cosmic Haystack

Dr. Jill TarterApril 23, 2008

Dr. Jill Tarter (SETI Institute)

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Dr. Tarter is the leader of the main project looking for radio signals from alien civilizations (she was also the model for the character Jodie Foster played in the movie “Contact.”) She updates us on the latest tools and plans in this quest, as digital technologies make possible huge improvements in our search systems. The Allen Telescope Array, being constructed in Northern California, will be the most powerful tool for finding SETI signals ever built. It is an innovative radio telescope assembled from a large number of small dishes, using consumer off-the-shelf technologies whenever possible to minimize costs. In the next decade, this new instrument will enable exploration that is 1000 to 10,000 times more sensitive than in the previous decades. This may just be enough!

 

New Worlds and Yellowstone: How Common are Habitable Planets?

Dr. Geoff MarcyMarch 5, 2008

Dr. Geoff Marcy (University of California, Berkeley)

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Astronomers have now discovered more than 250 planets orbiting other stars. Hear the scientist who has discovered more planets than anyone else in the history of the world discuss what kinds of planets we have found so far, and what a new generation of telescopes might find in the future. Could discoveries of planets that resemble the Earth spark a new era when we could someday begin communication with alien life? Dr. Marcy won the Shaw Prize (one of the highest honors in science) in 2005 and was Discover Magazine’s Space Scientist of the Year. He and his co-workers pioneered the technique for finding planets around other stars without seeing light from the planet (by looking for wiggles in the motion of the star each planet orbits.)