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Public Lecture: Planet IX, Rippling Spacetime, and the Accelerating Universe

Image of Rippling Spacetime
September 29, 2016
8:00PM - 9:00PM
1000 McPherson Lab, 140 West 18th Avenue

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Add to Calendar 2016-09-29 20:00:00 2016-09-29 21:00:00 Public Lecture: Planet IX, Rippling Spacetime, and the Accelerating Universe Please join us for the inaugural event of the new Ohio State Astronomy and Astrophysics (OSAA) public lecture series! David H. Weinberg, the Henry L. Cox Professor and Chair, Department of Astronomy will describe three startling, recent discoveries related to the laws of gravity: Unusual alignments in objects moving in the distant solar system suggest a previously unknown planet — 10 times more massive than Earth — orbiting far beyond Neptune and Pluto. Physicists detected ghostly ripples of space-time, produced by black holes spiraling in a galaxy more than a billion light years away—directly confirming two of Einstein's remarkable predictions about General Relativity.Observing still more distant objects, we see the universe’s expansion is NOT slowing down, BUT speeding up, signaling a mysterious "dark energy."  More information and directions are available on the webpage for the OSAA public lecture series. OSAA is a partnership between the Department of Astronomy and the Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics.   1000 McPherson Lab, 140 West 18th Avenue Department of Astronomy astronomy@osu.edu America/New_York public

Please join us for the inaugural event of the new Ohio State Astronomy and Astrophysics (OSAA) public lecture series! David H. Weinberg, the Henry L. Cox Professor and Chair, Department of Astronomy will describe three startling, recent discoveries related to the laws of gravity: 

Unusual alignments in objects moving in the distant solar system suggest a previously unknown planet — 10 times more massive than Earth — orbiting far beyond Neptune and Pluto. 

Physicists detected ghostly ripples of space-time, produced by black holes spiraling in a galaxy more than a billion light years away—directly confirming two of Einstein's remarkable predictions about General Relativity.

Observing still more distant objects, we see the universe’s expansion is NOT slowing down, BUT speeding up, signaling a mysterious "dark energy."  


More information and directions are available on the webpage for the OSAA public lecture series

OSAA is a partnership between the Department of Astronomy and the Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics