Astro Seminar Series - VIA ZOOM

Wednesday, September 16, 2020 11:30 am - 11:30 am EDT (GMT -04:00)

Catherine Heymans
Catherine Heymans is Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Edinburgh, Director of the GCCL Institute at the University of Bochum, Germany and a European Research Council Fellow.   She specialises in observing the dark side of our Universe using deep sky observations to test whether we need to go beyond Einstein with our current theory of gravity.  Catherine has co-authored over 170 articles in scientific journals and written the popular science book “The Dark Universe”.  Catherine shares her research with the public, both virtually through a Massive Open Online Course `AstroTech' which has attracted over 40,000 students worldwide, and in person through a wide range of events including Art, Music and Science Festivals.  In recognition of her work she was awarded the 2017 Darwin Lectureship from the Royal Astronomical Society and the 2018 Max-Planck Humboldt Research Award.  

Talk Title and Abstract:

Cosmic Concordance or Tension: Cosmology from the Kilo-Degree Survey

The Planck space mission has released exquisite observations of the early universe, providing the strongest evidence yet that the universe we live in is very dark indeed. Its precise results show that our universe is composed of 27% dark matter and 68% dark energy, while less than 5% is made up of the baryonic material that we are familiar with on Earth.  With their long-standing quest to make these precision measurements essentially now concluded, cosmologists are rapidly turning their attention to a much bigger and further-reaching question: what is the exact nature of this dark universe?    I will introduce the Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS), which we’ve used to map out the invisible dark matter and confront theories on the origins of dark energy.   Interestingly the increasing precision that KiDS has recently reported reveals a tension with Planck’s initial conclusions.  Is this is a sign that new data challenges lie ahead, or is it our first hint that the universe is truely exotic and that in order to understand the dark universe we will need some new physics that will forever change our cosmic view. 

Would you like to join this Zoom seminar?  Please email Donna Hayes.