Astrophysics Science Division
Astrophysics Science Division - Seminars & Meetings

Astrophysics Science Division Colloquium Series
Schedule: July - September 2005

Astrophysics Science Division Colloquium Series
Schedule: July - September 2005


Through the courtesy of the speakers since 2004, most presentations are available on line.

Future schedules:

  • 2005, Fourth Quarter
  • Past schedules:

  • 2005, Second Quarter
  • 2005, First Quarter
  • 2004, Fourth Quarter
  • 2004, Third Quarter
  • 2004, Second Quarter
  • 2004, First Quarter
  • 2003, Fourth Quarter

  • Time: 3:45 pm (Meet the Speaker at 3:30 pm) - Location: Bldg 2 Conference Room (Ground Floor, Rm 8) - unless otherwise noted.
    To view the abstract of a seminar, click on the title.

    July

    Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
          1 2
    3 4 5 6 7 8 9
    10 11 12 - Charles Hoopes (JHU), The Most Ultraviolet-Luminous Galaxies Discovered by GALEX 13 14 15 16
    17 18 19 20 21 22 23
    24 25 26 - Ann Hornschemeier (GSFC), Dark Energy, Dark Matter and Science with Constellation-X 27 28 29 30
    31

    August

    Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
      1 2 - Glen Langston (NRAO Greenbank), A Cosmologically Distant OH absorber/emitter 3 4 5 6
    7 8 9 10 11 12 13
    14 15 16 - Manasse Mbonye (RIT), Non-singular Black Hole Model as a Possible End Product of Gravitational Collapse 17 18 19 20
    21 22 23 24 25 26 27
    28 29 30 31    

    September

    Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
         1 2 3
    4 5 6 - Scott Barthelmy (GSFC), Swift, BAT, the NFIs, and GRBs 7 8 9 10
    11 12 13 14 15 16 17
    18 19 20 - Eli Dwek (GSFC), The Near Infrared Background: Interplanetary Dust or Primordial Stars? 21 - Lynne Valencic (UNAM), A Re-examination of UV Extinction and Diffuse Interstellar Bands 22 23 24
    25 26 27 - John Baker (GSFC), Binary Black Hole Modeling with Numerical Relativity 28 29 30  


    The Most Ultraviolet-Luminous Galaxies Discovered by GALEX

    Charles Hoopes

    Johns Hopkins University

    Tuesday, 12 July 2005

    Abstract

    The Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) is conducting deep and shallow imaging surveys in the ultraviolet. These surveys show that the population of galaxies with the largest UV luminosities is undergoing the strongest cosmic evolution. To understand the processes driving this evolution, we have undertaken a study of the most UV-luminous galaxies (UVLGs) in the local universe. I will describe the properties of these galaxies and how they compare to other galaxy populations. I will concentrate on the high surface brightness subset of this population (compact UVLGs), which are small galaxies with intense star formation and properties resembling Lyman Break Galaxies at z>3. Compact UVLGs appear to be a distinct population in the local universe, rather than just the extreme end of the star-formation distribution. These galaxies may prove to be useful laboratories for studying star formation in the conditions of the early universe.

    Dark Energy, Dark Matter and Science with Constellation-X

    Ann Hornschemeier

    Goddard Space Flight Center

    Tuesday, 26 July 2005

    Abstract

    Constellation-X, with more than 100 times the collecting area of any previous spectroscopic mission operating in the 0.25-40 keV bandpass, will enable high-throughput, high spectral resolution studies of sources ranging from the most luminous accreting supermassive black holes in the Universe to the disks around young stars where planets form.

    This talk will review the updated Constellation-X science case, released in booklet form during summer 2005. The science areas where Constellation-X will have major impact include the exploration of the space-time geometry of black holes spanning nine orders of magnitude in mass and the nature of the dark energy and dark matter which govern the expansion and ultimate fate of the Universe. Constellation-X will also explore processes referred to as "cosmic feedback" whereby mechanical energy, radiation, and chemical elements from star formation and black holes are returned to interstellar and intergalactic medium, profoundly affecting the development of structure in the Universe, and will also probe all the important life cycles of matter, from stellar and planetary birth to stellar death via supernova to stellar endpoints in the form of accreting binaries and supernova remnants. This talk will touch upon all these areas, with particular emphasis on Constellation-X's role in the study of Dark Energy.

    Green Bank Telescope Observations of Fundamental Constants and Spacecraft

    Glen Langston

    NRAO Greenbank

    Tuesday, 2 August 2005

    Abstract

    The 100m diameter Robert C. Byrd GBT telescope is fully operational and has been applied to a wide variety of astronomical observations. We summarize our measurements of the changes in fundamental constants based on spectral lines of OH molecule from the high redshift (z=0.764938) quasar J0134-0931.

    The capabilities of the telescopes in Green Bank have application to Goddard's Space Science priorities as well. For example, scientists at Goddard, have used the GBT to discover two interstellar molecules, Propanal and Propenal. The GBT has also contributed to our understanding of the solar system, by assisting in VLBI observations of the Huygens probe as it fell to the surface of Saturn's moon Titan.

    A Non-Singular Black Hole Model as a Possible End-Product of Gravitational Collapse

    Mannasse Mbonye

    Rochester Institute of Technology

    Tuesday, 16 August 2005

    Abstract

    We present a non-singular black hole model as a possible end-product of gravitational collapse. The depicted spacetime which is type [II,(II)], by Petrov classification, is an exact solution of the Einstein equations and contains two horizons. The equation of state in the radial direction, is a well-behaved function of the density and smoothly reproduces vacuum-like behavior near r=0 while tending to a polytrope at larger r, low density, values. The final equilibrium configuration comprises of a de Sitter-like inner core surrounded by a family of 2-surfaces of matter fields with variable equation of state. The fields are all concentrated in the vicinity of the radial center r=0. The solution depicts a spacetime that is asymptotically Schwarzschild at large r, while it becomes de Sitter-like for vanishing r. Possible physical interpretations of the macro-state of the black hole interior in the model are offered. We find that the possible state admits two equally viable interpretations, namely either a quintessential intermediary region or a phase transition in which a two-fluid system is in both dynamic and thermodynamic equilibrium. We estimate the ratio of pure matter present to the total energy and in both (interpretations) cases find it to be virtually the same, being 0.83. Finally, the well-behaved dependence of the density and pressure on the radial coordinate provides some insight on dealing with the information loss paradox.

    Swift, BAT, the NFIs, and GRBs

    Scott Barthelmy

    Goddard Space Flight Center

    Tuesday, 6 September 2005

    Abstract

    The Swift MidEx mission was launched in Nov 2004. Since the commissioning phase, BAT has been operating 7 months and localized 47 GRBs (as of July 2005). The two NFI instruments, XRT and UVOT have been operating for a slightly shorter period. They have detected the afterglows of many of the BAT bursts as well as making follow-up observations of INTEGRAL and HETE bursts. I will present descriptions of the 3 instruments and results, focusing mainly on the BAT, including some results of the BAT all-sky hard x-ray survey.

    The Near Infrared Background: Interplanetary Dust or Primordial Stars?

    Eli Dwek

    Goddard Space Flight Center

    Tuesday, 20 September 2005

    Abstract

    The intensity of the diffuse ~ 1 - 4 micron sky emission from which solar system and Galactic foregrounds have been subtracted is in excess of that expected from energy released by galaxies and stars that formed during the z < 5 redshift interval (Arendt & Dwek 2003, Matsumoto et al. 2005). The spectral signature of this excess near- infrared background light (NIRBL) component is almost identical to that of reflected sunlight from the interplanetary dust cloud, and could therefore be the result of the incomplete subtraction of this foreground emission component from the diffuse sky maps. Alternatively, this emission component could be extragalactic. Its spectral signature is consistent with that of redshifted continuum and recombination line emission from HII regions formed by the first generation of very massive stars. In this paper we analyze the implications of this spectral component for the formation rate of these Population III stars, the redshift interval during which they formed, the reionization of the universe and evolution of collapsed halo masses. We find that to reproduce the intensity and spectral shape of the NIRBL requires a peak star formation rate that is higher by about a factor of 4 to 10 compared to those derived from hierarchical models. Furthermore, an extragalactic origin for the NIRBL leads to physically unrealistic absorption-corrected spectra of distant TeV blazars. All these results suggest that Pop III stars contribute only a fraction of the NIRBL intensity with zodiacal light, star forming galaxies, and/or non-nuclear sources giving rise to the remaining fraction.

    A Re-examination of UV Extinction and Diffuse Interstellar Bands

    Lynne Valencic

    Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico

    Wednesday, 21 September 2005

    Location: Bldg 21/Room 183A, Time: 3:15

    Abstract

    Since their discovery in the 1930s, the diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) and their carriers have proven to be enigmatic, but a concensus has been reached that the carriers are likely to be ionized polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Models of PAHs show that they should contribute strongly to UV extinction in the diffuse ISM, particularly the far-UV nonlinear rise. In order to gain a more comprehensive view of the relationships between PAHs and UV extinction carriers, we have assembled DIB strengths from the literature and combined it with our homogeneous database UV extinction characteristics. We considered 4 DIB features over more than 100 lines of sight, making it the largest sample studied up to this point. Our results will be useful in constraining models of UV extinction.

    Binary Black Hole Modeling with Numerical Relativity

    John Baker

    Goddard Space Flight Center

    Tuesday, 27 September 2005

    Abstract

    Binary black hole systems are expected to be key sources of observable gravitational radiation for existing ground based gravitational wave instruments such as the NSF's Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), and for the space-based Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) a joint NASA/ESA mission. The peak radiation rate from a comparable mass binary system occurs in the binary's final moments as the two black holes spiral together, accelerating through each other's strong fields in a non-linear interaction governed by Einstein's gravitational field equations. Accurate modeling of modeling of the merger process, and consequently of the gravitational radiation waveforms produced, requires treatment by numerically simulating Einstein's equations, "numerical relativity." Numerical simulations of binary black hole systems have proven particularly challenging. I will describe recent technical advances which promise significant improvements in modeling applications, highlighting recent achievements of Goddard's Numerical Relativistic Astrophysics Group.

    Jerry Bonnell