Today on Far Future Horizons we present a Google Tech Talk
delivered by Puragra (Raja) GuhaThakurta on December 1, 2011 titled Our Place
in the Cosmos.
ABSTRACT
The lecture
"Our Place in the Cosmos" explains how we (and, for that matter, all
complex life forms) are connected to the Universe around us. This connection
relies on the fact that our Milky Way and other galaxies like it play host to
cosmic recycling processes that involve the formation of stars and their
planetary systems inside nebulae (dense gas/dust clouds), nuclear fusion
reactions that occur within stars, and the death of massive stars in explosions
known as supernovae. As a result of these processes the Earth contains elements
like carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, all of which are essential ingredients of
protein molecules that are basic building blocks of life on Earth. To
understand our origin we must therefore understand how galaxies form as part of
the so-called cosmic web and evolve via galaxy cannibalism: merging and
destruction of small satellite galaxies whereby their stars are incorporated
into larger galaxies. This portion of the story will take us back to the
earliest imaginable times in the history of the Universe. The talk will be
illustrated with the latest astronomical images obtained using
space-/ground-based telescopes and state-of-the-art computer simulations.
Speaker Info:
Puragra (Raja) GuhaThakurta received a bachelor's degree in Physics at Saint Xavier's College
in Kolkata, India
and a Ph.D. in Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton University
in 1989. He was a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ and at Princeton University. He worked briefly at NASA's
Space Telescope Science Institute in Balitmore, MD (operational headquarters of the Hubble Space
Telescope), before joining the faculty of the University of California
Santa Cruz in 1994 where he is currently a
professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics. The primary focus of Guha Thakurta's
research is the formation and evolution of galaxies, including the Andromeda
galaxy. He has authored/co-authored 350 journal articles and meeting abstracts,
and has given dozens of lectures, both non-technical and technical. He received
an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship in 1997 and the Herzberg Memorial Prize and
Fellowship in 2001.
This talk was hosted by Jeff Dean and Boris Debic.
Our Place in the Cosmos
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