Vorträge, Seminare, Ereignisse
A list of all Physics & Astronomy talks and seminars taking place in Heidelberg can be found at HePhySTO.
Upcoming events
TBA
Johanna Vos (TCD)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Johanna Vos (TCD)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
TBA
Laura Kreidberg (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Laura Kreidberg (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
TBD
Heidi Korhonen (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
Heidi Korhonen (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
TBD
Andrew Winter (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
Andrew Winter (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
TBD
Paola Pinilla (UCL)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
Paola Pinilla (UCL)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
TBD
Daniel Price (Monash University)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Mike Lau
Daniel Price (Monash University)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Mike Lau
TBD
Molly Wells (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
Molly Wells (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
TBD
Greg Green (MPIA)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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TBD
Greg Green (MPIA)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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TBD
Weighing the Universe with the Lightest Elements
Max Pettini (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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In the era of `Precision Cosmology' remarkable advances have been made in the determination of cosmological parameters from the Cosmic Microwave Background and Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, with spectacular concordance between these two pillars of the Standard Cosmological Model. While much exposure has been given to the impressive results from the WMAP and Planck missions, perhaps less attention has been paid to the equally striking advances made in the last ten years in the measurements of the abundances of the light elements forged in the first few minutes of our Universe history. In this talk I shall focus in particular on the determination of the primordial abundance of deuterium, in an overview that spans almost 80 years, from the first seeds of the idea sown in the 1940s to the most recent results and forward look to the era of Extremely Large Telescopes and next generation Wide Field Surveys of the sky. To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Eduardo Banados
Max Pettini (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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Abstract
In the era of `Precision Cosmology' remarkable advances have been made in the determination of cosmological parameters from the Cosmic Microwave Background and Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, with spectacular concordance between these two pillars of the Standard Cosmological Model. While much exposure has been given to the impressive results from the WMAP and Planck missions, perhaps less attention has been paid to the equally striking advances made in the last ten years in the measurements of the abundances of the light elements forged in the first few minutes of our Universe history. In this talk I shall focus in particular on the determination of the primordial abundance of deuterium, in an overview that spans almost 80 years, from the first seeds of the idea sown in the 1940s to the most recent results and forward look to the era of Extremely Large Telescopes and next generation Wide Field Surveys of the sky. To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Eduardo Banados
TBA
Myriam Benisty (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Myriam Benisty (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Origin of supermassive black holes from dense star clusters: Implications for the Local Universe and for JWST
Dominik Schleicher (Sapienza University of Rome)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Marcelo Alberto Cortes Vergara
Dominik Schleicher (Sapienza University of Rome)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Marcelo Alberto Cortes Vergara
TBA
Farzana Meru
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Farzana Meru
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
TBD
Rodrigo Ibata (Strasbourg Observatory)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Morgan Fouesnau
Rodrigo Ibata (Strasbourg Observatory)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Morgan Fouesnau
TBD
Juergen Blum (TU Braunschweig)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
Juergen Blum (TU Braunschweig)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBD
TBD
Corinne Charbonnel (University of Geneva)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Genevieve Parmentier
Corinne Charbonnel (University of Geneva)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Genevieve Parmentier
TBA
Patzer Colloquium (TBA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Patzer Colloquium (TBA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
A new perspective on giant planet formation
Ravit Helled (University of Zurich)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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The formation history of giant planets inside and outside the solar system remains unknown. I will present a new path for giant planet formation where runaway gas accretion is initiated only at a mass of ~100 M_Earth. This suggests that the transition to a gas giant planet, a planet whose composition is dominated by hydrogen and helium, occurs at ~Saturn’s mass. Delaying runaway accretion to later times (a few Myr) and higher masses is likely to be a result of an intermediate stage of efficient heavy-element accretion that provides sufficient energy to hinder rapid gas accretion. This implies that Saturn has never reached runaway gas accretion, and that it is a "failed giant planet". The transition to a gas giant planet above Saturn's mass naturally explains the differences between the bulk metallicities and internal structures of Jupiter and Saturn, and the characteristics of Uranus and Neptune. In terms of giant exoplanets, delaying runaway gas accretion to planets beyond Saturn's mass explains the transitions in the mass-radius (M-R) relations of observed exoplanets and the high metallicity of intermediate-mass exoplanets. To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Saskia Hekker
Ravit Helled (University of Zurich)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
Show/hide abstract
Abstract
The formation history of giant planets inside and outside the solar system remains unknown. I will present a new path for giant planet formation where runaway gas accretion is initiated only at a mass of ~100 M_Earth. This suggests that the transition to a gas giant planet, a planet whose composition is dominated by hydrogen and helium, occurs at ~Saturn’s mass. Delaying runaway accretion to later times (a few Myr) and higher masses is likely to be a result of an intermediate stage of efficient heavy-element accretion that provides sufficient energy to hinder rapid gas accretion. This implies that Saturn has never reached runaway gas accretion, and that it is a "failed giant planet". The transition to a gas giant planet above Saturn's mass naturally explains the differences between the bulk metallicities and internal structures of Jupiter and Saturn, and the characteristics of Uranus and Neptune. In terms of giant exoplanets, delaying runaway gas accretion to planets beyond Saturn's mass explains the transitions in the mass-radius (M-R) relations of observed exoplanets and the high metallicity of intermediate-mass exoplanets. To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Saskia Hekker
TBA
Thaddeus Komacek (U. of Oxford)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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APEx Signature Speaker
Thaddeus Komacek (U. of Oxford)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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APEx Signature Speaker
TBD
Rob Fender (University of Oxford)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Brian Reville
Rob Fender (University of Oxford)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Brian Reville
TBA
Kiyoaki Doi (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Kiyoaki Doi (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
The impact of stellar feedback on galaxies
Stefanie Walch-Gassner (University of Cologne)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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Stellar feedback shapes the multi-phase interstellar medium in galaxies and the stellar initial mass function. Moreover, feedback impacts the large-scale evolution of galaxies by regulating star formation and by driving galactic fountain flows and outflows. Using modern high-performance computing simulations, we can study the relative importance of stellar winds, radiation, and supernovae in shaping the multi-phase interstellar medium. Using these simulations, we find that pre-supernova feedback is highly relevant for regulating star formation. In particular, the ionizing radiation of massive stars is dominating over the impact of non-ionizing radiation or stellar winds. On the other hand, supernovae drive hot bubbles and super-bubbles with substantially higher pressure than the typical midplane pressure of a disk galaxy, thereby pushing gas out into the circum-galactic medium. Additionally, cosmic rays, which are in this context most importantly accelerated by supernova shocks, help to sustain the galactic outflow via a vertical cosmic ray pressure gradient. In this talk, I will give an overview of the importance of stellar feedback for the evolution of galaxies, which we study using numerical simulations. To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Cormac Larkin
Stefanie Walch-Gassner (University of Cologne)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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Abstract
Stellar feedback shapes the multi-phase interstellar medium in galaxies and the stellar initial mass function. Moreover, feedback impacts the large-scale evolution of galaxies by regulating star formation and by driving galactic fountain flows and outflows. Using modern high-performance computing simulations, we can study the relative importance of stellar winds, radiation, and supernovae in shaping the multi-phase interstellar medium. Using these simulations, we find that pre-supernova feedback is highly relevant for regulating star formation. In particular, the ionizing radiation of massive stars is dominating over the impact of non-ionizing radiation or stellar winds. On the other hand, supernovae drive hot bubbles and super-bubbles with substantially higher pressure than the typical midplane pressure of a disk galaxy, thereby pushing gas out into the circum-galactic medium. Additionally, cosmic rays, which are in this context most importantly accelerated by supernova shocks, help to sustain the galactic outflow via a vertical cosmic ray pressure gradient. In this talk, I will give an overview of the importance of stellar feedback for the evolution of galaxies, which we study using numerical simulations. To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Cormac Larkin
TBA
Sophia Stuber (NAOJ)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBA
Sophia Stuber (NAOJ)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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TBA
TBD
Lars Mohrmann (MPIK)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
Lars Mohrmann (MPIK)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
TBD
Katja Poppenhäger (Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam (AIP))
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Joachim Wambsganss
Katja Poppenhäger (Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam (AIP))
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Joachim Wambsganss
TBD
Anna-Christina Eilers (MIT)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Nadine Neumayer
Anna-Christina Eilers (MIT)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Nadine Neumayer
TBD
Esra Bulbul (MPE)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Matteo Maturi
Esra Bulbul (MPE)
Heidelberg Joint Astronomical Colloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Philosophenweg 12, Main Lecture hall (gHS),
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To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Matteo Maturi
TBA
Isabella Prandoni (IRA/INAF)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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KoCo Signature Speaker (GC)
Isabella Prandoni (IRA/INAF)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
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KoCo Signature Speaker (GC)
TBA
Matteo Brogi (Turin)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Matteo Brogi (Turin)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
TBA
Coryn Bailer-Jones (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)
Coryn Bailer-Jones (MPIA)
Königstuhl Kolloquium ( Home page, Hephysto link )
Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Level 3 Lecture Hall (301)