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6 March

Canada Council for the Arts: Imagining New Frontiers: Celebrating 50 Years of Groundbreaking Research

Join the Canada Council for the Arts for this special anniversary event featuring acclaimed winners of the Killam Prize. In an insightful panel discussion, three of Canada’s leading researchers will address the importance of creativity and imagination in the field of research, and the societal impact of their work in today’s world. The event is moderated by Paul Kennedy, Host of CBC Radio Ideas. Panelists:
1 March

UofT AstroTour: Cold out there, eh? The Climates of Alien Worlds

A central question for humanity has long been “are we alone, and what is our place in the universe?” This fundamentally human question has motivated much of astronomy. The recent discovery of a plethora of exoplanets has raised the tantalizing possibility that we might start to answer that question. Searching for alien communications and chemical signatures of life represent two approaches to answering that question–but a third option also exists.
8 March

Perimeter Institute: Inspiring Future Women in Science 2018 (WEBCAST)

Celebrate International Women’s Day with a live webcast event featuring inspiring talks by women currently working in science, technology, engineering, and math.
8 March

McMaster Space Initiative: Space Industry Night

Always wanted to work in the space industry? Looking to explore new and exciting career paths? Come speak to industry professionals about how you can get involved in the space industry with guests from MDA, Skywatch, VanWyn, and more! We have a great line up of panelists to start off the event consisting of McMaster students and alumni who currently work in industry to share their experience and advice. Light refreshments will be provided.
9 March

RASC Mississauga: Making The Moon

The Moon is an important part of our everyday lives. It regulates the tides and stabilizes the tilt of Earth's rotation axis, playing an important role in making our planet the place it is today. The lunar phases were also used to construct the first calendars, and the Moon was the first celestial body studied in detail by astronomers, not to mention the only one that has been visited by humans so far. Compared to other satellites in the Solar system however, the Moon is unusual, so how did it come to be? Dr.
23 March

ASX Star Talk: "So, you want to go to Mars?" with Dr. John B. Charles

For everyone who was dissapointed by our cancelled symposium, Dr. John B. Charles (one of the original symposium speakers) has agreed to come to Toronto to give a special Star Talk!
27 March

RASC Mississauga: Astronomy Night at the Riverwood Conservancy (CANCELLED)

Explore the universe with members of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. Telescopes will be set up to provide amazing views of the Moon, the planets and more! Meet at the Chappell House Lawn.
5 April

RASC Hamilton: Those Pesky Neutrinos

In the late 1990s, A Canadian research team played an important role in proving something we all should know about neutrinos: they are almost — but not quite — massless. When scientists first realized that nuclear reactions must be the power source for the Sun and stars, it seemed there would be no way to observe those reactions directly. Wolfgang Pauli invented the neutrino in 1930 to help explain radioactivity, and neutrinos were first measured in the 1950s.
28 March

York Science Forum: Evolution of the Universe

Join us as particle physicist and Nobel Laureate Arthur McDonald takes us on a journey through the underground Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNOLAB) to measure the smallest and most elusive particles in the universe. Followed by a panel discussion also featuring York physicists Sampa Bhadra and Scott Menary, moderated by Matt McGrath, BBC journalist and York Science Communicator in Residence. About the speaker and panelists
6 April

RASC Mississauga: The Most Distant Galaxies in the Universe

The combined power of infrared observatories both in space and from the ground has allowed us to observe extraordinarily distant galaxies. Some of the most distant are observed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang, when the universe was merely 2% of its current age. Dr. Muzzin will talk about what what observatories like the Hubble Space Telescope have shown us about these exotic young galaxies. He will also introduce the James Webb Space Telescope, NASA's $9 billion dollar IR-optimized successor to Hubble.