KICP
search our site

KICP Seminars & Colloquia

Seminars & Colloquia: Summer 2006

Archive: Seminars & Colloquia

EFI Seminars and Colloquia

Astronomy Colloquia





KICP Seminars & Colloquia

Summer 2006

 
Friday Noon Lunch Seminars
 
Wednesday Colloquia
 
Astronomy Colloquia
 
Informal Thursday Lunch Discussions
 
Special Seminars
 
Open Group Seminars

Schedule for Summer 2006
7 Sep 2006
Thursday
Angela Olinto
(University of Chicago)
Auger North Wrap-Up Session & Picnic [Abstract]
19 Sep 2006
Tuesday
Darren Croton
(University of California, Berkeley)
Galaxy Formation: Why the Devil Really is in the Detail [Abstract]


Friday Noon Lunch Seminars
Wednesday Colloquia

KICP Wednesday Colloquia: Unless otherwise noted, all talks are held in RI 480 at 3:30pm on Wednesdays. Refreshments start at 3:15pm.
Astronomy Colloquia

Astronomy Colloquia: Unless otherwise noted, all talks are held in RI 480 at 3:30pm on Wednesdays. Refreshments start at 3:15pm.
Informal Thursday Lunch Discussions

KICP Cosmology lunch (Thunch) Weekly on Thursdays, Noon, LASR 152 (Conference Room).

Please join us for an informal lunch discussion, led by KICP fellows, of recent news and papers in cosmology. Topics range from experiment and observations to theory in all areas of KICP science.

To submit or view papers for this week's Thunch please visit the Thunch website.
Special Seminars

7 September 200619 September 2006 

7 September 2006
1:00 pm, LASR 152 & LASR Lawns (Picnic)


Angela Olinto, University of Chicago

Auger North Wrap-Up Session & Picnic  

Discussion summarizing the findings of the Auger North Team - Introduction by Stephan Meyer and discussion lead by Angela Olinto. A panel of Auger North participants will also speak. A picnic will follow (3:00-6:00pm) on the Lawns of LASR & Astronomy Buildings. Food and beverages will be provided.

19 September 2006
12:00 pm, LASR Conference Room


Darren Croton, University of California, Berkeley

Galaxy Formation: Why the Devil Really is in the Detail  

A review of our current progress toward understanding galaxy formation in a cosmological context using simulations of both baryons and dark matter. In particular, the focus will be on the recent surge of interest in AGN and the significant effect that they can have on massive galaxy evolution.

Open Group Seminars

Directories
Maps
Search


UChicago Department of Physics
UChicago Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics
Enrico Fermi Institute


Other Kavli Institutes

Last update: October 7, 2008