Physics Colloquium – Rob Pisarski

KIRC 1150 3135 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United States

Rob Pisarski, Brookhaven National Laboratory

Title and abstract to be announced

Physics Colloquium – Segev BenZvi

KIRC 1150 3135 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United States

Segev BenZvi, Assoc. Professor, Department of Physics, University of Rochester

Measuring Cosmic Expansion with the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument

Since the first observations of the accelerating expansion of the universe at the end of the 1990s, astronomers and physicists have struggled to understand dark energy, a mysterious repulsive force that drives the acceleration. A number of models of dark energy exist. The simplest (the cosmological constant), assumes dark energy is non-interacting and is the same everywhere in space and time. Different models predict subtely different features in the large-scale structure of the universe. We are now entering an era of new photometric and spectroscopic surveys which can discriminate different models of dark energy with unprecedented precision.