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Astronomy Colloquium

Cygnus X3 (Lia Corrales)
January 19, 2017
2:30PM - 3:30PM
1080 Physics Research Building

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Add to Calendar 2017-01-19 14:30:00 2017-01-19 15:30:00 Astronomy Colloquium An X-Ray View of the Dusty Universe Lia Corrales - University of Wisconsin-Madison A significant fraction of the heavy elements produced by stars spend some time in the interstellar medium as dust grains.  These heavy metal transporters influence gas cooling during star formation, eventually becoming the seeds for planet formation.  Much like quasar spectra are used to probe intergalactic gas, observations of X-ray bright Galactic compact objects can yield key insights to the mineralogy and evolution of dust grains in the Milky Way.  With high resolution X-ray spectroscopy, we can directly measure the state of metals and the mineral composition of dust in the interstellar medium.  In addition, dust scattering produces a diffuse halo image around bright X-ray objects, revealing information about dust grain sizes and their spatial distribution. I will review the most recent exciting dust scattering discoveries, which draw on multi-wavelength observations.  Finally, I will discuss open questions regarding our X-ray view of the ISM that can be addressed with lab experiments and future X-ray observatories.Coffee and Donuts served at 2:00pm in 4054 McPherson Lab. 1080 Physics Research Building Department of Astronomy astronomy@osu.edu America/New_York public

An X-Ray View of the Dusty Universe 

Lia Corrales - University of Wisconsin-Madison 

A significant fraction of the heavy elements produced by stars spend some time in the interstellar medium as dust grains.  These heavy metal transporters influence gas cooling during star formation, eventually becoming the seeds for planet formation.  Much like quasar spectra are used to probe intergalactic gas, observations of X-ray bright Galactic compact objects can yield key insights to the mineralogy and evolution of dust grains in the Milky Way.  With high resolution X-ray spectroscopy, we can directly measure the state of metals and the mineral composition of dust in the interstellar medium.  In addition, dust scattering produces a diffuse halo image around bright X-ray objects, revealing information about dust grain sizes and their spatial distribution. I will review the most recent exciting dust scattering discoveries, which draw on multi-wavelength observations.  Finally, I will discuss open questions regarding our X-ray view of the ISM that can be addressed with lab experiments and future X-ray observatories.

Coffee and Donuts served at 2:00pm in 4054 McPherson Lab.