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Cosmic Videos
Astronomy Talk: The Restless Universe – Shri Kulkarni
Cosmic explosions were first noted nearly 2,000 years ago but only in the past 100 years have astronomers secured recognition of classes of explosions ranging from exotic eruptions to the death of stars (supernovae). The Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) and its successor, the Zwicky Transient Factory (ZTF) are high-tech projects squarely aimed to chart the […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: Fingerprints of the First Stars
Our current story for the origin of the heavy elements has at its core a recycling program on the grandest of scales. Using Keck, we have traced atoms as they flow from the intergalactic medium into galaxies, where they are incorporated into stars, undergo fusion, and are returned in supernovae and other types of stellar […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: Gravitational Lensing
Observing distant objects allows us to peer back in time to early stages of the universe, across the most active period of galaxy growth when most stars were born. While galaxies are challenging to study at such large distances, nature occasionally gives us an advantage through the phenomenon of gravitational lensing. Tucker Jones is discussing […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: Geological Activity in the Solar System
From the elusive plumes of Europa to Enceladus’ dramatic cryovolcanic geysers and the extreme volcanism of Io, the Solar System hosts a wide spectrum of active geological processes. Over the past decade, major breakthroughs in planetary geophysics have been made by spacecraft missions, space-based telescopes, and ground-based observatories including Keck. In this talk, I will […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: The Remaining 95 Percent – Insights From Gravitational Lensing
In our standard model of cosmology, only five percent of the mass-energy budget of the Universe is accounted for by particles that have been detected in Earth-based laboratories. The remaining 95 percent, called dark matter and dark energy, has only been detected gravitationally via astronomical observations. Although the abundance of dark matter and dark energy […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: The 2015-16 El Niño: Wind on the Water and the Weather on Mauna Kea
In 2015, the global wind machine fired up record numbers of powerful hurricanes in the central Pacific, with several making close passes to the Island of Hawaii. Is it possible that the Island of Hawaii is protected from a direct hurricane impact by Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea? What does the historical record tell us? […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: Life in the Universe – The Science of Astrobiology
Is life common in the universe, or rare? Humans have pondered this question for millennia. Today we are privileged to be able to bring the tools of modern science to answer questions that were once the province of philosophers and theologians. In this Astronomy Talk, Dr. Carl Pilcher, Interim Director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute, […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: Where We Came From — How Solar Systems Form
How common are Earths? Unknown just a generation ago, more than 2,000 planets have been discovered orbiting other stars in our galaxy and Hawaii’s own Keck Observatory has been at the forefront of this incredibly exciting field. We invited Professor Greg Laughlin, an expert on planet formation and dynamics at the University of California, Santa […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: Manu `Imiloa: — Modern & Ancient Ways of Navigating our Universe
A Hilo native born in Keaukaha and raised in Panaʻewa, Celeste “Cesi” Manuia Ha’o is an Education Associate and the Outreach Coordinator of the ‘Imiloa Astronomy Center of Hawaiʻi. Ha`o just gave a presentation as part of Keck Observatory’s Astronomy Talk series entitled, “Manu `Imiloa: Modern & Ancient Ways of Navigating our Universe”. She is […]
Read More >Astronomy Talk: What Wonderful Worlds – Exploring our Solar System
Knowledge about our own Solar System has increased by leaps and bounds over the past few decades due to a combination of spacecraft missions and technical advancements at the W. M. Keck Observatory and other telescopes. Imke de Pater, Professor of Astronomy at University of California, Berkeley will start with a short overview of the […]
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