Weinberg Memorial Lecture with James Peebles
Apr
10
2024
Apr
10
2024
Description
If you were unable to attend the April 10th, 2024 Weinberg Memorial Lecture with Dr. James Peebles, you can now view the recording on YouTube!
The Steven Weinberg Memorial Lecturer Dr. James Peebles, winner of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on cosmological models, will discuss the lingering questions of our ever-growing universe. What was the Universe doing before it was expanding? What is the dark matter that dominates the mass of the Universe? Dr. Peebles will explore these questions and more!
Abstract
We have good evidence that the universe we see around us is not forever. The universe started expanding from a hot dense state known as the Big Bang. The universe still is expanding and cooling, leaving fossil evidence from what happened as the universe expanded. These fossils are the evidence that our universe really is evolving. Yet the theory of the expanding universe is incomplete. I will explain what we know and do not know; so many questions remain. What was the Universe doing before it was expanding? What is the dark matter that dominates the mass of the Universe? Steven Weinberg's research on particle physics introduced the idea of dark matter, but we still do not fully understand its interplay with the Standard Model of Particle Theory that Weinberg did so much to establish. We are leaving fascinating problems for research by new generations of scientists.
Location
AT&T Hotel and Conference Center Amphitheatre
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Audience
Other Events in This Series
Mar
21
2022
Weinberg Memorial Lecture with Frank Wilczek
Join the College of Natural Sciences for the inaugural Steven Weinberg Memorial Lecture in honor and memory of CNS professor and Nobel Laureate Steven Weinberg.
4:00 pm – 5:15 pm • In Person
Speaker(s): Frank Wilczek