Events
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CGCA Seminar – Dr. Amy Steele
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesDr. Amy Steele, Planetary Science Institute The CGCA Friday Seminar Series is hosted by the Center for Gravitation, Cosmology & Astrophysics at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. These seminars cover a broad number of topics related to the Center's research areas. …
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CANCELLED: Physics Colloquium – Justin Goodrich
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesDue to circumstances beyond our control, the Physics Colloquium for Friday, 11/7/2025 is cancelled.
Justin Goodrich, Brookhaven National Laboratory
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CGCA Seminar – Terrence Pierre Jacques
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesSelf-Consistent Simulations of the Bar-mode Instability in Rotating Quasi-Stable Neutron Stars
Dr. Terrence Pierre Jacques
West Virginia UniversityRapidly rotating neutron stars (NSs) formed from core-collapse supernovae serve as excellent astrophysical laboratories for probing their equation of state (EoS) and internal structure. As these stars cool and contract, their spin angular momentum may increase, making them susceptible to the dynamical bar-mode instability
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CANCELLED: Physics Colloquium – Jong-Woo Kim
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesDue to circumstances beyond our control, the Physics Colloquium for Friday, 11/14/2025 has been cancelled.
Jong-Woo Kim, Argonne National Lab
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Coffeeshop Astrophysics – Space Rocks and Stardust
Anodyne Coffee Shop 224 W Bruce Street, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesSpace Rocks and Stardust Speakers: Pratyasha Gitika, Tamal RoyChowdhury, Laila Vleeschower Are shooting stars really stars falling from the sky? Spoiler alert: they’re not! Those quick flashes of light are actually tiny bits of space dust and rock burning up …
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CGCA Seminar – Prof. Sharon Morsink
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesThe masses and radii of the neutron stars observed by NICER
Prof. Sharon Morsink
University of AlbertaNeutron stars are the densest known gravitationally-stable objects in the Universe. Their strong gravitational fields, rapid rotation rates, and supra-nuclear central densities allow for a fascinating interplay between general relativistic effects and nuclear physics theory. Pulse-profile modeling is a technique that uses the gravitationally-lensed X-ray flux emitted from hot spots on the neutron star's surface to infer its mass and radius. General relativity is a crucial ingredient in this analysis.
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Physics Colloquium – Julian May Mann
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesPhysics Colloquium - Julian May Mann, Stanford University Presentation title and abstract will be announced when they are available.
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CGCA Seminar – Dr. Logan Prust
Kenwood IRC 2175 Milwaukee, WI, United StatesFrame-Dragging Reveals Central Engine of a Superluminous Supernova
Dr. Logan Prust
Center for Computational Astrophysics - Simons FoundationType I superluminous supernovae (SLSNe-I) are an order of magnitude brighter than standard supernovae, with the internal power source for their luminosity still unknown. The central engines of SLSNe-I are hypothesized to be magnetars, but many SLSNe-I light curves exhibit multiple bumps or peaks that are unexplained by the standard magnetar model.
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Physics Colloquium – Dr. Qiuyan Chen
Chemistry 108 2050 E Kenwood Blvd, Milwaukee, WI, United StatesEffect of Phosphorylation Barcodes on Arrestin Binding to a Chemokine Receptor
Dr. Qiuyan Chen
Assistant Professor of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Indiana University School of MedicineCells often fine-tune their responses to signals through chemical tags called phosphorylation 'barcodes' placed on receptors at the cell surface. Different G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) kinases (GRKs) add these barcodes at different sites, but how these patterns influence arrestins — key proteins that control receptor signaling and trafficking — has been unclear.
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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 …