Seminars
Our seminars take place in the lecture room of the building at
Praha–Sporilov.
Next seminar:
10.08.2015 15:00
Norbert Werner
Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, Stanford University
How supermassive black holes and star-formation sculpt the visible Universe
Abstract
Norbert Werner
How supermassive black holes and star-formation sculpt the visible Universe
In the course of structure formation, only a small fraction of the baryons turned into stars - most remain in a diffuse intergalactic medium. The growth of galaxies is regulated by feedback processes, such as energy and momentum input from supernovae, and jets and winds of accreting supermassive black holes. These processes, collectively called galactic feedback, can limit or even inhibit star formation, and thus a detailed knowledge of how they work is essential for our understanding of galaxy formation and evolution. I will start my talk by presenting recent observational results on the role of supermassive black holes in keeping the most massive galaxies 'red and dead'. Then, I will 'zoom out' to the outskirts of galaxy clusters where we also find hints that supermassive black holes played an important role in the distant past. X-ray observations with the Suzaku satellite reveal a remarkably homogeneous distribution of iron out to the virial radius of the nearby Perseus Cluster, requiring that most of the metal enrichment of the intergalactic medium occurred before the cluster formed, probably more than ten billion years ago, during the period of maximal star formation and black hole activity. Finally, I will talk about the upcoming ASTRO-H satellite which will revolutionize X-ray spectroscopy and our understanding of how feedback processes couple to the intergalactic medium.
Previous seminar:
31.07.2015 10:30
Mordehai Milgrom
Weizmann Institute, Rehovot, Israel
Scale invariance at low accelerations: An alternative to dark matter
Abstract
Mordehai Milgrom
Scale invariance at low accelerations: An alternative to dark matter
Galactic systems exhibit large mass discrepancies: The observed matter in
them falls very short of providing enough gravity to hold them together.
The mainstream solution of this conundrum is the evocation of large
quantities of “dark matter”, which purportedly supplies the extra gravity.
Its nature is not known, but it is clear that it cannot be made of any
presently known form of matter. The MOND paradigm offers a different
solution: a breakdown of standard dynamics (gravity and/or inertia)
in the limit of low accelerations (below some acceleration constant a0),
such as are found in galactic systems. In this limit, dynamics become
space-time scale invariant, and is controlled by a scale-invariant
gravitational constant that replaces G. With the new dynamics, the various
detailed manifestations of the galactic mass discrepancies disappear with
no need for exotic dark matter. I will briefly describe the achievements
and the remaining shortcomings of the paradigm.
If you would like to give a seminar in our group, please contact Vladimir Karas or Jaroslav Hamersky.
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