ASX: More to the Universe than Meets the Eye
James Taylor, Associate Professor, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Waterloo
Thousands of years from now, this age – your lifetime – will be remembered as a great period of scientific discovery. In the past few decades we have learnt some profound and unanticipated things about the nature of our universe, in particular that it contains forms of matter and energy previously unknown on Earth. Dark matter is the source of all structure in the universe, yet it is almost impossible to detect directly. Dark energy is the name given to whatever causes the accelerated expansion of the universe, but its true nature is even more mysterious. In this talk, Prof. Taylor will describe his recent work using dark matter around galaxy clusters to measure the expansion of the universe and probe dark energy, and also current work trying to detect dark matter structures around tiny dwarf galaxies in our own extragalactic back yard.
James Taylor is originally from Ottawa. He received an undergraduate degree in Math and Physics and an M.Sc. in Astronomy from the University of Toronto, and then moved to Victoria, B.C. to do his Ph.D. in Astrophysics. Taylor then worked at the University of Oxford and at Caltech, before moving back to Canada in 2006 to take up a position at the University of Waterloo, where he is an associate professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy. What little spare time he has is spent climbing, building things and cooking, depending on the season.
This is a FREE event and open for all ages.
University of Toronto - St. George Campus
McLennan Physical Labs, Room 102
60 St. George St.
Toronto
http://asx.sa.utoronto.ca/2014/11/02/more-to-the-universe-than-meets-the-eye/