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Toronto Vision Seminar: Roberto Abraham

  • Bahen Centre for Information Technology, Room 5187 40 Saint George Street Toronto, ON, M5S 2E4 Canada (map)

Date: Wednesday, November 27

Time: 2-3 p.m.

Location: BA5187 and online via Zoom. Enlarge image to scan QR code for Zoom link or visit Zoom meeting registration webpage.

There is no registration required to attend this event in person. However, seating is limited, so arriving early is recommended.

Talk title: “Crazy Telescopes, Ghostly Galaxies, and the Invisible Universe”

Abstract: Bigger telescopes are usually better telescopes... but not always. Sometimes crazier telescopes are better telescopes. In this talk I will describe the nearly unexplored universe of ghostly, nearly undetectable phenomena in the heavens, and describe how mosaic telescope arrays are being used to open up this new area of astrophysics. I will focus on why finding these “low surface brightness” objects is important, and why it has also been so devilishly difficult to find them using “normal” telescopes. We have probably been missing out seeing a vast range of exotic objects, like low-surface brightness dwarf galaxies, supernova light echoes, galactic halos, and planetary dust rings. These objects are nearly undetectable with conventional telescopes, but their properties may hold the keys to understanding a host of fundamental phenomena, including the nature of dark matter and the mechanisms by which galaxies form and evolve.

These things are hard to study, but bizarre new telescopes, made possible by technological advances driven by mobile phone camera sensors and processors, and ubiquitous access to fast networks, are changing the landscape. The Dragonfly Telephoto Array (a.k.a. Dragonfly) is an example of this new class of telescope. Dragonfly is comprised of 168 off-the-shelf high-end telephoto lenses utilizing novel nanostructure-based optical coatings. I will showcase some early results from Dragonfly, and describe how this array is evolving to tackle the ultimate challenge in this subject: directly imaging the “Cosmic Web”. This is the largest collapsed structure in the Universe, and the repository of most of its matter. We know this web exists, but nobody knows what it really looks like, or how it funnels the gas created by the Big Bang into pockets of dark matter to drive the formation of galaxies. We are now building a massive expansion of the Dragonfly telescope that will let us take pictures of the Cosmic Web, and we hope to find these things out.

Bio: Roberto Abraham is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and served as President of the Canadian Astronomical Society. Prof. Abraham was born in Manila, grew up in San Francisco and Vancouver, and obtained his BSc from University of British Columbia before moving to the UK to obtain a doctorate from Oxford. He did postdoctoral work at the National Research Council of Canada's Herzberg Institute and at Cambridge University.