2017 STAG public lecture by Dame Professor Jocelyn Bell Burnell Event
- Time:
- 14:30
- Date:
- 8 November 2017
- Venue:
- Turner Sims
Event details
The curious case of the pulsating star
In this talk Professor Bell Burnell will describe how unraveling a mysterious pulsating radio signal led to the discovery of an unsuspected new kind of star (now called a pulsar). These bizarre stars have some amazing features. Professor Bell Burnell will outline what we now understand pulsars to be.
Professor Bell Burnell is a Visiting Professor in Oxford, a Pro-Chancellor of Trinity College Dublin, and (the first female) President of the Royal Society of Edinburgh - Scotland's Academy. She discovered pulsars as a graduate student in radio astronomy in Cambridge, opening up a new branch of astrophysics - work recognised by the award of a Nobel Prize to her supervisor.
The STAG Research Centre brings together world-leading academics from three research groups - Particle Physics, Astrophysics and Gravitation - to explore issues of fundamental physics and astronomy.
Useful Downloads
- 2017 STAG Lecture Poster
- Poster: Active galactic nuclei and the dusty torus
- Poster: Gravitational memory effect and holography
- Poster: Nuclear interactions in a hologram
- Poster: Peaking into a neutron star
- Poster: Rapidly evolving supernovae
- Poster: Scattering amplitudes in particle physics