Věda a výzkum

Přednášky a semináře

Semináře pořádáme nově s čtvrtletní periodou a s bohatším obsahem.

Příští seminářové odpoledne (od 13h)

16. 12. 2015
Simone Recchi
Initial mass function and feedback in dwarf galaxies
Abstract: The stellar initial mass function (IMF) is a crucial quantity for the evolution of galaxies. It determines the fraction of stars in various mass ranges; hence it affects various crucial feedback mechanisms (e.g. from supernovae and radiation by massive stars). In the last years, systematic IMF variations in galaxies, particularly in low-mass ones, have been reported. I will review in this seminar what is know about IMF variations in dwarf galaxies and I will show how these variations affect the chemical evolution of galaxies. I will describe in particular the so-called integrated galactic IMF (IGIMF) theory, according to which the IMF is steeper in dwarf galaxies and flatter in larger ones. I will show which evidences support this theory and which evidenced do not support it. However, the IMF does not only change the rate of metal production. It changes also the dynamics and thermodynamics of gas, which in turn affect star formation and metal circulation. I will then review our efforts to implemented IMF variations in chemo-dynamical simulations of dwarf-galaxy evolution and I will show the multiple ways in which IMF variations can affect the dynamical and chemical evolution of galaxies. I will finish my presentation with some new ideas and modelling of the induced star formation in supershells and its connection with the formation and evolution of globular clusters.
16. 12. 2015
Pavel Koten
Recent meteor shower outbursts and storms - models and observations
Abstract: A number of the meteor shower outbursts and storms occurred in recent years starting with several Leonid storms around 2000. The methods of the meteoroid streams modelling became better and more precise. An increasing number of the observing systems enabled better coverage of such events. The observers provide modellers with an important feedback on precision of their models. Here we present comparison of several observational results with the model predictions. As the main source of the data the video observations of our team are used.
16. 12. 2015
Space Instrumentation Development at the Astronomical Institute
Štěpán Štverák
Abstract: The Solar Physics Department studies is not only focused on the basic research and ground observations of the active phenomena from the solar atmosphere throughout the whole heliosphere but also participates in development of remote/in-situ space experiments on several future ESA missions. Currently the largest involvement inheres in the Solar Orbiter mission (namely the RPW, STIX, and METIS experiments) with a planned launch in 2018. Another two contributions are related to the ASPIICS sensor on mission Proba-3 and RPWI instrument on mission JUICE. Here the current status of all the space hardware activities will be presented.
16. 12. 2015
Petr Škoda
Astroinformatics - The Key to New Astronomical Discoveries
Abstract: The current astronomy is flooded by the data. Some instruments have been already producing petabyte-scaled data flows, the reduction and analysis of which require supercomputing clusters. Astronomy becomes the data-driven science where the major part of budget of big projects will not go into telescope and instrumentation but to the data processing infrastructure. Astronomy, as well as other science disciplines has begun to recognize informatics, advanced statistics and machine learning as a key part of its methodology and new astronomical discoveries are expected from knowledge extraction of federated astronomical databases and archives. The new ways of multi-dimensional data analysis are being tested using wider range of 3D visualization devices including the immersive Virtual reality and virtual worlds. The changing nature of next-decade astronomy also requires education of a new type of experts - the astronomical data scientist with deep knowledge of both astronomy and physics as well as modern computer science and software engineering, well prepared to analyze petabyte-scale data in multi-cloud environment. The need to address all such problems led to the emergence of a new astronomical discipline - Astroinformatics. We give a brief overview of its subjects and methodology and present some astroinformatics projects ongoing in the Astronomical Institute of CAS in collaboration with several faculties of information technology in CR.

 

Dále se konají menší tématické semináře jednotlivých oddělení:

Semináře slunečního oddělení

Vždy v úterý ve 13:00 (září–červen, s výjimkou úterků po celoústavním semináři) v zasedací místnosti slunečního oddělení pracoviště Ondřejov.

Program seminářů

08/03/2016, 13:00
Ivana Macourkova
Ondřejov Solar Activity Monitoring and Forecasting

 

Semináře oddělení GPS

Obvykle v pondělí od 14 hod v přednáškové místnosti pracoviště Praha–Spořilov.

Program seminářů

18. 03. 2016, 10:00
Simone Recchi
Astronomical Institute, Academy of Sciences, Prague
New ideas on the formation of globular clusters
Abstract: Several ideas have been put forward in the recent past about the formation of globular clusters (GCs), but none of them seem to be fully satisfactory. In particular it is very challenging to explain the presence of multiple populations of stars and the anticorrelations between some light elements (in particular the Na/O and Mg/Al anticorrelations) within GC. For most of the proposed scenarios, in order to fit these anticorrelation the GC must lose a very large fraction of first generation stars, but it is unclear how to disperse such a huge fraction of stars. We propose here that first generation stars are formed in a supershell, swept up after the explosion of a very massive primordial star (the so-called popIII star). Since these supershell stars are born at some distance from the center of the GC, and since they inherit the outward-directed radial velocity of the supershell, it is likely that most of them will be unbound. On the other hand, a significant fraction of the ejecta of these supershell stars can propagate, almost unimpeded, towards the center of the GC. They pile up there, cool (because of the large densities reached in the center) and can form a new generation of stars. We will present in this seminar the details of this scenario and 1-D chemo-dynamical simulations corroborating it.
(Takes place at: Sporilov library)