Events
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Coffeeshop Astrophysics – What You Probably Don’t Know About AI
Anodyne Coffee Shop 224 W Bruce Street, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesWhat You Probably Don't Know About AI Speakers: Ronan Humphrey, Adam Opperman, Pratyusava Baral Over the last century, computing in science has changed from human computers doing calculations by hand to supercomputers that can perform over 1018 (that’s 1,000,000,000,000,000,000!) operations …
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CGCA Seminar – Samuel E. Gralla
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesCan black holes evaporate past extremality?
Professor Samuel E. Gralla
University of ArizonaBlack holes with sufficiently large initial charge and mass will Hawking-evaporate towards the extremal limit. The emission slows as the temperature approaches zero, but still reaches the point where a single Hawking quantum would make the object superextremal, removing the horizon. We take this semiclassical prediction at face value and ask: When the emission occurs, what is revealed?
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Physics Colloquium – Moritz Münchmeyer
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesAI Reasoning in Theoretical Physics with the TPBench Project
Assistant Professor Moritz Münchmeyer
UW-Madison Department of PhysicsLarge-language models are becoming powerful enough to assist physicists with mathematical reasoning at the research level. In this talk, I will first present our dataset TPBench (tpbench.org), which was constructed to benchmark and improve AI models specifically for theoretical physics.
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Physics Colloquium – Chris Fragile
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesWhat Are We Learning About Super-Eddington Accretion Disks From Simulations?
Professor Chris Fragile
Department of Physics & Astronomy, College of CharlestonAccretion of gas onto black holes is one of the most important processes shaping our Universe. Understanding extremely high rates of accretion (dubbed 'super-Eddington') is vital to explaining the challenging observation that supermassive black holes (SMBHs) are fully formed at redshifts >7. It is also important to understanding astrophysical objects such as tidal disruption events (TDEs) and ultra-luminous X-ray sources (ULXs).
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CGCA Seminar – Abygail Waggoner
KIRC KEN 2175 3135 N. Maryland Ave., MilwaukeeWhat’s Feeding Terrestrial Planets? JWST Observations of Protoplanetary Disk
Dr. Abygail Waggoner
University of Wisconsin-MadisonThe formation of terrestrial, or earth-like, planets is thought to occur in the inner few au of protoplanetary disks, but what is the composition of the dust and gas that forming-planets may inherit? In this talk, we’ll discuss how the James Webb Space Telescope can be used to measure the chemical composition of protoplanetary disk gas and how models can be used to understand the evolution of material throughout planet formation.
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Physics Colloquium – Lulu Agazie
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesPhysics Colloquium - Lulu Agazie, UWM Physics Presentation title and abstract will be announced when they are available.
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CGCA Seminar – Shio Sakon
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesDetecting Gravitational Wave Signals - Methods, Challenges, and Opportunities
Shio Sakon
Pennsylvania State UniversityThe LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration’s fourth observing run (O4) produced a remarkable expansion of the gravitational-wave transient catalog, with nearly three times as many significant detections as were known at the start of the run. Among these were several first-of-their-kind events that challenged existing theories, and the increased rate of detections reflected the improvement in detector sensitivity and analysis capabilities over the past decade.
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CGCA Seminar – Debatri Chattopadhyay
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesNeutron Star–Black Hole Binaries: Predictions and Observations
Debatri Chattopadhyay
Northwestern UniversityNeutron star–black hole (NS–BH) binaries have emerged as key targets for multi-messenger astrophysics following the first gravitational wave detections of such systems. In this talk, I present population synthesis predictions for the Galactic NS–BH population, models that interpret the first observed mergers, and forecasts for future radio, gravitational-wave, and electromagnetic discoveries.
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CGCA Seminar – Kenzie Nimmo
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesUnraveling the origins of fast radio bursts and using them as probes of extreme plasmas
Kenzie Nimmo
Northwestern UniversityFast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration flashes of coherent radio emission originating from extragalactic distances, offering a unique view into the physics of compact objects and their surrounding environments. Despite their brief and unpredictable nature, precise localizations of a small number of FRBs have already revealed a striking diversity in host galaxies, local environments, and burst properties - suggesting multiple progenitor channels linked to extreme compact objects. However, the nature of FRB sources remains one of the most exciting mysteries in astrophysics.
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Physics Colloquium – Ronan Humphrey
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesPhysics Colloquium - Ronan Humphrey, UWM Physics
Presentation title and abstract will be announced when they are available.