Astronomy Colloquium - Meridith Joyce

Artist's impression of the central bulge of the Milky Way. Credit: ESO/NASA/JPL-Caltech/M. Kornmesser/R. Hurt
January 31, 2023
2:45PM - 3:45PM
In Person & Online: Fontana Lab - Room 2020 ; Zoom Webinar

Date Range
2023-01-31 14:45:00 2023-01-31 15:45:00 Astronomy Colloquium - Meridith Joyce Title: The Ages of Stars and Other Stories: Redefining the Standard for 1D Stellar Modeling Across the Mass Spectrum Abstract: Stellar models are the means by which astronomers infer the ages, masses, and distances of stars, thus setting the first rungs of the cosmological distance ladder and allowing us to peer into the history of our Galaxy and Universe. Recent advances in space-based instrumentation (e.g. Gaia, TESS, SDSS, JWST) promise high-precision data sets comprising millions of stars. However, astronomy has now entered an era in which observational precision eclipses modeling precision by a factor of 10. This means the barrier to more precise fundamental stellar parameters---and hence to progress in astrophysics as a whole---lies in the theoretical and computational domain rather than in the power of our telescopes. Using my studies of Betelgeuse, the Milky Way's galactic bulge, and other stellar settings as examples, I will discuss the power, limitations, and future of stellar modeling. Speaker: Meridith Joyce (CSFK Konkoly Observatory) In Person & Online: Fontana Lab - Room 2020 ; Zoom Webinar America/New_York public

Title: The Ages of Stars and Other Stories: Redefining the Standard for 1D Stellar Modeling Across the Mass Spectrum

Abstract:

Stellar models are the means by which astronomers infer the ages, masses, and distances of stars, thus setting the first rungs of the cosmological distance ladder and allowing us to peer into the history of our Galaxy and Universe. Recent advances in space-based instrumentation (e.g. Gaia, TESS, SDSS, JWST) promise high-precision data sets comprising millions of stars. However, astronomy has now entered an era in which observational precision eclipses modeling precision by a factor of 10. This means the barrier to more precise fundamental stellar parameters---and hence to progress in astrophysics as a whole---lies in the theoretical and computational domain rather than in the power of our telescopes. Using my studies of Betelgeuse, the Milky Way's galactic bulge, and other stellar settings as examples, I will discuss the power, limitations, and future of stellar modeling.

Speaker: Meridith Joyce (CSFK Konkoly Observatory)

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