• Physics Colloquium – Gabriel Freedman

    KIRC KEN 2175 3135 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee

    Speaker: Gabriel Freedman, PhD Candidate – UWM Physics Low-frequency Gravitational Wave Searches and Data Analysis with Hamiltonian Sampling The pulsar timing array community has found evidence for a correlated stochastic signal following the Hellings-Downs pattern indicative of an isotropic stochastic …

  • Physics Colloquium – Ned Budisa

    Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Speaker: Ned Budisa, Professor & Research Chair, Dept. of Chemistry, University of Manitoba Expanding the Genetic Code via Directed Evolution: Tools for Biophysicists, Materials Science, and Beyond Reprogramming the genetic code to include non-canonical amino acids (ncAAs) is a powerful …

  • Physics Colloquium – Sukanya Chakrabarti

    Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Speaker: Sukanya Chakrabarti, Ph. D., Pei-Ling Chan Endowed Chair and Professor, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Alabama-Huntsville The Precision Frontier of Dark Matter Constraints from Direct Acceleration Measurements For over a century, our understanding of dark matter has …

  • Physics Colloquium – Katey Alatalo

    Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Speaker: Dr. Katey Alatalo, Assistant Astronomer, Space Telescope Science Institute The Life-cycle of Gas in Dying Galaxies Modern day galaxies populate a bimodal distribution, in both morphology and color space. Their morphological and color properties are also inter-related, with lenticular …

  • Physics Colloquium – Justin A. Trujillo

    Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Speaker: Justin A. Trujillo, PhD Candidate - UWM Physics Implementing Novel Data Analysis Methods to Enhance Biophysical Studies Studying the structure, motions, and interactions of proteins as they perform their functions is greatly important in biophysics research. Time-resolved serial femtosecond …

  • Coffeeshop Astrophysics – The View from Above

    Anodyne Coffee Shop 224 W Bruce Street, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    The View from Above Speakers: Leith Benali, Lulu Agazie Since the launch of Sputnik 1 in 1957, roughly 14,500 satellites have been launched into orbit around Earth. Currently there are about 11,700 active satellites, roughly 1,100 of which are used …

  • CGCA Seminar – Hector Silva

    Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Prof. Hector Silva, Assistant Professor at the Department of Physics of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign The ringing of a different bell: quasinormal modes and their excitation beyond general relativity The inference of quasinormal mode frequencies from the ringdown part …

  • CGCA Public Talk – Searching for Life in the Universe

    Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Searching for Life in the Universe Presented by Dr. Dawn Erb We hope you will join us on Wednesday, October 15 in the new Chemistry Building, Room #108 for Dr. Dawn Erb's presentation, "Searching for Life in the Universe." This …

  • CGCA Seminar – Usha Raut

    Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Prof. Usha Raut, Milwaukee School of Engineering Can LIGO be Relevant for High Energy Physics? There have been spectacular advances by LIGO, and other gravitational wave detectors in recent years. But an obvious limitation is that gravitational wave detectors currently …

  • Physics Colloquium – Amanda Baylor

    Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United States

    Early Warning of Gravitational Waves from Neutron Star Mergers
    Amanda Baylor
    Graduate Student
    University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

    For the past decade, ground-based gravitational-wave observatories have been making detections of ripples in the fabric of spacetime from the mergers of black holes and neutron stars. Mergers involving at least one neutron star could also produce electromagnetic counterparts which may reveal new insights into the physics of these astrophysical phenomena. However, if electromagnetic observatories are not pointed at the location of the source prior to merger, we miss vital information about the physics of merger.