CRA seminar: Prof. Shane Davis (University of Virginia)

Title: How Black Holes Dine above the Eddington "Limit" without Overeating or Excessive Belching Abstract The study of super-Eddington accretion is essential to our understanding of the growth of super-massive black holes in the early universe, the accretion of tidally disrupted stars, and the nature of ultraluminous X-ray sources. Unfortunately, this mode of accretion is … Continue reading "CRA seminar: Prof. Shane Davis (University of Virginia)"

CRA Seminar: Prof. Huan Yang (Perimeter Institute)

Probing neutron star physics with gravitational wave detections The recent detection of the binary neutron star merger event (GW170817) has marked the beginning of multi-messenger astronomy with gravitational waves. In this talk I will briefly review current findings associated with GW170817 and introduce new opportunities from future detections. In the first part, I will explain … Continue reading "CRA Seminar: Prof. Huan Yang (Perimeter Institute)"

CRA Seminar: Lee Samuel Finn (Penn State University)

Observational tests of general relativity with black hole inspiral, coalescence, and ringdown Prof. Lee Samuel Finn (Penn State University) Website: https://www.phys.psu.edu/people/lsf5 Abstract: As far as it has been tested, general relativity “works”; however, tests of general relativity are spotty in their coverage and - especially in the dynamical regime - leave much to be desired … Continue reading "CRA Seminar: Lee Samuel Finn (Penn State University)"

CRA Cosmic Coffee: Danielle Skinner

Howey N201/202 837 State Street, Atlanta, GA, United States

  Title: Where Do Population III Stars Form? Abstract: We perform a cosmological simulation with a comoving volume of 1 Mpc^3 to study the birth-places of Population III stars, using the adaptive mesh refinement code Enzo. We investigate the distribution of host halo masses and its relationship to the Lyman-Werner background intensity. In our sample … Continue reading "CRA Cosmic Coffee: Danielle Skinner"

CRA Cosmic Coffee: Chris Evans

Howey N201/202 837 State Street, Atlanta, GA, United States

Title: Marginally Trapped Surfaces in Black Hole Mergers Abstract: For numerical simulations of black hole mergers, typically the apparent horizon that forms is of primary interest and can be used to calculate the mass and angular momentum of the merger remnant. In a generic binary black hole evolution however, the apparent horizon is only one … Continue reading "CRA Cosmic Coffee: Chris Evans"