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General Meeting – February 2020

February 14, 2020 @ 7:30 pm - 9:30 pm PST

Details

Date:
February 14, 2020
Time:
7:30 pm - 9:30 pm PST
Event Category:

Other

"What's Up?"
Chris Butler from OCA

Venue

Irvine Lecture Hall of the Chapman University
336 N Center St
Orange, CA 92866 United States
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From Apples to Orange Juice: Can We Infer a Galaxy’s Biography from Just One Photograph?

This composite image shows examples of galaxies similar to our Milky Way at various stages of construction over a time span of 11 billion years. The galaxies are arranged according to time. Those on the left reside nearby, while those at the far right existed when the cosmos was about 2 billion years old. The bluish glow from young stars dominates the colour of the galaxies on the right. The galaxies on the left are redder from the glow of older stellar populations. Astronomers found the distant galaxies in two NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope surveys: 3D-HST, and the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey, or CANDELS. The observations were made in visible and near-infrared light by Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 and Advanced Camera for Surveys. The nearby galaxies were taken from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. This image traces Milky Way-like galaxies over most of cosmic history, revealing how they evolve over time. Hubble's sharp vision resolved the galaxies' shapes, showing that their bulges and discs grew simultaneously. Link: NASA Press release The present and early Milky Way (artist’s illustration) Artist's Illustration of the present Milky Way Artist's Illustration of the early Milky Way

Despite having data stretching back over 10 billion years and computer simulations that make realistic-looking galaxies starting from just gas and dark matter, humans do not have a theory that predicts why a galaxy looks the way it does based on what it used to look like. We ask this from the biological theory of evolution, but, because astronomers cannot experiment on our subjects, we face challenges biologists (and sociologists) do not. I will talk about the two main routes we are taking to overcome this handicap: (1) assuming our data nevertheless do look like that of biology or sociology and proceeding accordingly; (2) attempting to infer the past histories of individual objects through the single snapshots we actually have of them. The latter is the correct thing to do, but it is unclear if it is possible, which would leave astronomers in the unique position of having data…but nothing to do with it! This epistemological situation, and the opportunity to explore questions like “Is galaxy evolution knowable?” is fascinating to me, and I think it cannot but lead to important new insights about our place in the universe.

Louis Abramson

Louis Abramson is a Carnegie-Princeton Fellow at the Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena. He works to tease-out the growth histories of individual galaxies from information encoded in their colors. He hopes that such galaxy biographies will yield insights into what causes some galaxies to look like the Milky way while others do not. Outside of academia, Louis is an elected official in the City of Los Angeles and chairs the Homelessness and Outreach Committees of the Central Hollywood Neighborhood Council.