Presenter: Ana Bonaca, Harvard University
Website: https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~abonaca/
Host: Vicky Kalogera, Daniel I. Linzer Distinguished University Professor, CIERA Director
The Milky Way is a stepping-stone to understanding galaxies and the universe. Being a typical galaxy, inferring events in its history helps to develop the overall theory of galaxy formation. Further, since the effects of dark matter are observable in individual stars, the Milky Way provides an excellent setting for testing the nature of dark matter. So far, the progress on these fundamental topics has been made predominantly by studying the spatial distribution of different stellar populations. Now, the Gaia mission is revolutionizing the way we view our Galaxy by delivering precise proper motions, complemented by radial velocity measurements from ground-based spectroscopic surveys. I will discuss how I dynamically model the 3D positions and velocities that these datasets provide for millions of stars to constrain the formation history of the Milky Way, the small-scale structure of its dark matter halo, and the particle nature of dark matter.
Audience
- Faculty/Staff
- Post Docs/Docs
- Graduate Students
Contact
CIERA Astrophysics
(847) 491-8646
Email