Life, the Universe, and Everything: the next 50 years of astronomy

Life, the Universe, and Everything: the next 50 years of astronomy

Life, the Universe, and Everything: the next 50 years of astronomy

event Monday 22 July 2024 schedule 7.00pm - 8.00pm BST
Past event
Past event
event Monday 22 July 2024 schedule 7.00pm - 8.00pm BST
  • speakers
Professor Vasily Belokurov, Professor Hiranya Peiris and Professor Nikku Madhusudhan
Open to: 
Public (open to all)
Location: 
Babbage Lecture Theatre | View details

Tickets for this talk are now sold out. Please visit the Institute of Astronomy YouTube Channel to join online.

Join us for an illuminating panel discussion covering 'Life, The Universe, and Everything: The Next 50 Years of Astronomy,' featuring three Cambridge professors working at the forefront of astronomical research.

Our distinguished panelists bring a wealth of expertise to the table, offering diverse perspectives on the evolving landscape of astronomy. From the search for planets and life in the Universe, to the origin of our Milky Way and the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy, our experts will chart a course for the future of astronomical inquiry.

Embark on a journey through space and time as we discuss the revolutionary instruments and experiments poised to transform our understanding of the Universe. From next-generation telescopes and space missions targeting distant exoplanets to table-top searches for dark matter, our expert panelists will illuminate the possibilities and challenges that lie ahead.

Speakers

Professor Vasily Belokurov (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge)

Vasily

Vasily Belokurov is Professor of Astronomy at the Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge. He graduated from Moscow State University, Relativistic Astrophysics Department, Sternberg Astronomical Institute, and did his DPhil at the University of Oxford, in the group of Professor Wyn Evans.

Professor Hiranya Peiris (Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge)

Professor Peiris

Hiranya Peiris holds the Professorship of Astrophysics (1909) at the Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge. 

After obtaining her undergraduate degree at Cambridge, Professor Peiris completed her PhD at Princeton. She was a Hubble Fellow at Chicago before returning to Cambridge as a STFC Halliday Fellow. She was then appointed to a lectureship (2009) and Professorship (2015) at UCL. She was Director of the Oskar Klein Centre in Stockholm (2016-2022) and Director of the UCL Cosmoparticle Initiative (2016-2023).

Professor Peiris conducts interdisciplinary research based on extracting fundamental physics from cosmological data. She has led analyses of cosmological survey data from multiple major international facilities, as well as making major contributions to theoretical cosmology and statistical astronomy. 

Her work has been recognised by awards such as the IOP Fred Hoyle Medal and Prize (2018), the Max Born Prize of the German Physical Society and the IOP (2021), and the Eddington Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (2021). Her contributions to survey cosmology have been recognised through a share of the Gruber Cosmology Prize (2012) and the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics (2018), both awarded to the WMAP Science Team. She was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 2022.

Professor Nikku Madhusudhan

Professor Nikku Madhusudhan

Professor Nikku Madhusudhan is Professor of Astrophysics and Exoplanetary Science at the Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge. His research interests include understanding the atmospheres, interiors, formation conditions and habitability of exoplanets (planets that orbit other stars). Nikku is widely known for pioneering the inverse techniques used to measure the atmospheric properties of exoplanets, seen using a wide array of observational facilities in space and on Earth. He has received various awards for his work in exoplanetary science, including the 2019 MERAC Prize in Theoretical Astrophysics from the European Astronomical Society, and the 2019 Pilkington Prize for excellence in teaching at the University of Cambridge.

Booking information

Booking for this event is now closed.

Location

Babbage Lecture Theatre
New Museums Site
University of Cambridge
Cambridge
CB2 3QZ
United Kingdom

This event is part of

In-person and online
Monday 22Wednesday 24 July 2024

Join us in-person or online for "IoA50: New Frontiers of Astronomy", a special series of public talks marking 50 years of pioneering advancements at the Institute of Astronomy.