Compton Lecture - How Astrophysicists See the Universe

11:00 am–12:00 pm KPTC Room 106

Kersten Physics Teaching Center
5720 South Ellis Ave, Room 106
Chicago IL 60637

How Astrophysicists See the Universe
Christoph Welling, KICP Fellow

Astrophysics is a tricky business. Even the closest stars are trillions of miles away, too far to explore them up close any time soon. So astronomers and physicists have to rely on observations they can make from earth. To do this, every night, and day, a wide array of observatories all over the world are catching the light from distant galaxies, radio waves from the early universe and even ripples in space-time itself.


This is a lecture series about these telescopes and how they are used to learn about the universe. We will talk about how modern observatories work, and what the light they detect can tell us about the objects it came from. We will also discuss new types of observatories, that do not detect light, but other messengers, like cosmic rays, neutrinos or gravitational waves.

THIS EVENT IS FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Find livestream and recordings here.

Event Type

Lectures

May 11