Departmental Colloquium
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Wang
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Songhu Wang will give a colloquium on "Placing the Solar System into the Big Picture --- The Origin of Exoplanets"
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Charisi
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Maria Charisi will give a colloquium on "Searching for supermassive black hole binaries in the era of multi-messenger astronomy".
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Walton
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Dominic Walton will give a colloquium on "The Extremes of Accretion: Ultraluminous X-ray Sources and Super-Eddington Pulsars"
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Fang
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Ke Fang will give a colloquium.
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Yang
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Chao-Chin Yang will give a colloquium on "Planetesimal Formation through the Streaming Instability"
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 –Weinberg
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Nevin Weinberg will give a colloquium on "When stars go nonlinear: large amplitude tides and stellar oscillations"
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Kamaha
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Alvine Kamaha (University of Albany) will give a colloquium on the LZ dark matter experiment.
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Ignarra
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Christina Ignarra (Stanford) will give a colloquium on the LZ dark matter experiment.
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Fall 2020 – Roberts
VirtualSpeaker: Amy Roberts (University of Colorado Denver) Title: The Super Cryogenic Dark Matter Search Detectors: Pushing Lower Thresholds in Search of an Answer Abstract: A wealth of cosmological measurements suggest that non-luminous "dark matter" makes up approximately 80% of all matter. So far, the effects of dark matter have only been observed gravitationally. But direct-detection
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Fall 2020 – Walker
VirtualStephen Walker from UA Huntsville will present a talk on Galaxy Cluster Outskirts: Pushing Back the Final Frontier in Cluster Astrophysics.