ETHOS: the complex interplay between dark and baryonic physics in galaxy formation and evolution
Astronomy Lunch Series
Jesús Zavala
Assistant Professor, Centre for Astrophysics & Cosmology
University of Iceland
Assistant Professor, Centre for Astrophysics & Cosmology
University of Iceland
Assistant Professor of Physics
Oberlin College and Conservatory
Department of Physics & Astronomy
University of Toronto
Department of Physics & Astronomy
Stony Brook University
Dr. Perna's research has three primary interests: high-energy astrophysics, cosmology, and exoplanets.
Department of Astronomy
Harvard University
Dr. Conroy's group studies a broad range of topics in the fields of galaxy formation, stellar evolution, stellar spectroscopy, and stellar populations using both observational and theoretical tools.
Department of Physics & Astronomy
McMaster University
Dr. Parker specializes in observational cosmology and galaxy evolution, with particular interest in the processes of galaxy and structure formation.
Postdoctoral Fellow
Department of Physics & Astronomy
University of Waterloo
Assistant Professor of Physics
CIFAR Azrieli Global Scholar
McGill Space Institute
Dr. Haggard studies the Galactic center and Sgr A*, EM counterparts to gravitational wave sources, accreting compact objects, supermassive black holes and their host galaxies, and multi-wavelength and time domain surveys.
Assistant Professor
Department of Physics, Engineering Physics & Astronomy
Queen's University
Professor
Department of Astronomy
University of Michigan
Jon Miller studies compact objects such as black holes and neutron stars to understand their basic properties, how gas falls onto and is ejected from them, and their implications for general relativity.