NEWS at MPA

Location: MPA

Regional Workshop for 2015 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship applicants: “Finishing touch“ for your proposal

EU Workshop

Comparing predictions of the re-appearance of the multiply imaged supernova behind MACS1149.5+2223

Lensing Seminar

"Spiral galaxies and Vlasov-Poisson equations" and "The formation of supermassive black holes in high-redshift galaxy mergers"

MPA Galaxy group Meeting

"Exploring a new route towards merging massive black holes" and "Magnetic field amplification in protoneutron stars"

High Energy Seminar: SESTAS Seminar

"The baryon content of dark matter halos"

Institute Seminar: MPA Institute Seminar

MPA's role as a midwife of gravitational wave astronomy

MPA Institute Seminar: MPA Institute Seminar

"High ionisation absorption in low mass X-ray binaries"

High Energy Seminar

"Describing the matter bispectrum of large-scale structure with three simple shapes"

Cosmology Seminar

"Recombination physics and galaxy clustering"

MPA Institute Seminar

"On the velocity function of galaxies from the CALIFA survey"

Cosmology Seminar

"Weak lensing by galaxy troughs with modified gravity"

Cosmology Seminar

"Instability of mass transfer in a planet-star system"

MPA Institute Seminar

"Bayesian Component Separation"

Special Seminar

Regional Workshop: The European Research Council (ERC) "Focus: Starting & Consolidator Grants"

EU Workshop
see announcement on black board [more]

 "Planet formation in protoplanetary discs"

Special MPA Colloquium
The detection of large populations of pebbles of mm-cm sizes in protoplanetary discs around young stars has motivated the study of pebble accretion as a driver of planetary growth. This seminar covers all aspects of planet formation by pebble accretion, from dust growth over planetesimal formation to the accretion of planetary embryos and fully-grown planets with gaseous envelopes.  Pebbles are accreted at a very high rate, orders of magnitude higher than accretion of planetesimals, and the rate decreases only slowly with distance from the central star. This allows planetary cores to start their growth in much more distant positions than their final orbits. The giant planets orbiting our Sun and other stars, including systems of exoplanets in very wide orbits, can therefore be formed in complete consistency with planetary migration. I will demonstrate tracks of planetary mass versus semi-major axis for all the major classes of planets and outline priorities for future research directions in planet formation. [more]

"The primordial magnetic field in our cosmic backyard"

MPA Institute Seminar

"Mergers of Galaxy Clusters and their Implications in Structure Formation"

High Energy Seminar

"Detect first star signatures with PopII GRB and DLA"

MPA Institute Seminar

"Large deviation statistics for the cosmic density field" and "The growth of galaxies through fountain-driven gas accretion"

Cosmology Seminar: Cosmology Seminar

"Behind the scenes: how negative molecular ions were discovered in space"

CAS Lecture

"Simultaneous Bayesian Location and Spectral Analysis of Gamma-Ray Bursts"

Bayes Forum

"Circumgalactic Cosmology"

MPA Institute Seminar

"NUEX: how NUcleosynthesis can constrain EXplosions?"

Special Seminar

"Nebular Spectra of Type Ia Supernovae"

Master Colloquium

"Haloes like Lego: an exploration into the variability and correlations of L* accreted stellar haloes using toy models"

MPA Institute Seminar

"Inferring the core-collapse supernova explosion mechanism with gravitational waves"

Special Seminar

"Understanding the ionized gas in galaxies -- simulations and observations"

MPA Visitor Seminar

"Using cosmology surveys to probe the dark matter interactions" and "Probing CGM and IGM with Lyman-alpha Absorption"

Cosmology Seminar

"The strong gravitational lensing tool in the era of space and ground-based wide field surveys"

Special Cosmology Seminar

Hunting dark matter: All Bases Covered

Special Cosmology Seminar

"Interpreting ALMA Observations of the Interstellar Medium During the Epoch of Reionization"

Special Structure Formation

"Testing cosmology with small and large scales"

Special Structure Formation

"The dark matter content and structure of dwarf galaxies"

Special Galaxy Seminar

"Quenching, black hole feedback and anisotropic thermal conduction"

Special Structure Formation

"Action-based dynamical modeling for the Milky Way disk with Gaia

Special Structure Formation

"Supernova Feedback: from Multiphase ISM to Galactic Outflows"

Special Galaxy Seminar

Bayesian metamodels for astronomical image analysis

MPA Institute Seminar

"Parameter estimation from CMB data sets"

Cosmology Lectures

"Phase-space reconstruction of the cosmic large-scale structure"

Cosmology Seminar

"HPC Architectures of the next generation"

MPA Talk

"The assembly of galaxies in dark matter haloes"

MPA Institute Seminar

"Surrogate minimization in high dimensions"

Bayes Forum

"Secular evolution of Milky Way-type galaxies"

Special MPA Seminar

"EU Grants and Fellowships for Post-Docs in Horizon 2020

EU/Horizon 2020

"Jets from black-hole X-ray binaries: formation, content, and destruction"

Special MPE Seminar

Mapping the accretion flow around black holes through X-ray reverberation

High Energy Seminar

"Hydrodynamics of the deflagration in the oxygen-neon-magnesium core: Sensitivity of the input physics to the collapse condition"

MPA Special Seminar

"Physicists in the area of risk & finance"

CARSEM

"Self-similar spherical collapse"

http://wwwmpa.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~komatsu/lectureseries/ [more]

"On the LIGO-VIRGO announcement"

Informal Discussion

"The Origin of Spirals in Galaxies"

Opinas: Opinas Seminar

Gravitational Waves Core-Collapse Supernova Science with Advanced and Future Generation Interferometers"

MPA Visitor Seminar
The study of Gravitational Waves (GW) from Core-Collapse Supernova (CCSNe) can help elucidate the explosion mechanism and give us information about the physical properties of the collapsed core.Given the variety of possible GW morphologies (usually long and broadband), the reconstruction of the waveform and extraction of physical information is a difficult task. It requires an understanding of multi-dimensional CCSN simulations, data analysis caveats, detector response, as well as understanding how insights provided by neutrino and electromagnetic messengers help us extract GW signals from the detector noise.In the LIGO/Virgo Supernova Working Group we need all the aspects of this research program.In this talk I will review the techniques used to search for GW from CCSNeand current work on O3 preparation and detection perspectives with possible future GW Observatories. [more]

"Bayesian calibration of predictive computational models of arterial growth"

Bayes Forum

Measuring ISM metallicities in nearby and distant galaxies

MPA Institute Seminar

"Reheating After Inflation”

Cosmology Lectures

"Evolution of baryons in the high-redshift universe"

Cosmology Seminar

"Carbon-rich chains in space and in the laboratory"

CAS Seminar

The Destructive Birth of Massive Stars and Massive Star Clusters

SESTAS at MPA

Origins of the RNA world: the fate of nucleobases in warm little ponds

CAS Seminar

"Stellar Ages and Galactic Evolution"

Special MPA Colloquium

"Characterizing the circum/inter-galactic medium in emission around z~3 quasars"

MPA Institute Seminar

"Merger Shocks in Galaxy Clusters from Bow Shocks to Runaway Shocks"

High Energy Seminar

Superfluid Dark Matter (Part 1)

Cosmology Lecture

The Irene-Curie Fellowship Program to improve the gender balance at TU/e

MPA Gender Forum

Powering galactic super-winds with small-scale AGN winds

AGN Club

Powering galactic super-winds with small-scale AGN winds

High Energy Seminar

From Astrophysics to Ntuity, a renewable energy platform

Career Seminar

The role of cosmic rays, magnetic fields, and turbulence in AGN feedback

Special extragalactic seminar

Magnetic Fields in Cosmology

Lecture Series on Cosmology
ZOOM coordinates: TBA Lecture notes will be made available at https://wwwmpa.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~komatsu/lectureseries shortly before the lecture. [more]

Star-forming galaxies at cosmic noon

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
Lookback studies have assembled a fairly complete census of galaxies over 85% of cosmic time and established that the bulk of stars, which today reside in massive ellipticals and spirals, formed rapidy at z~1-3, "cosmic noon". I will discuss observational progress and highlight recent results that provide insights into physical processes driving galaxy evolution, with a focus on spatially and spectrally resolved studies of the kinematics, gas, and star formation. I will outline some of the emerging questions and prospects to address them with new/future optical-to-mm instrumentation. [more]

Large-scale gas flows in the Local Group

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
The characterization of large-scale gas-circulation processes in the cosmological environment of galaxies is of fundamental importance to understand galaxy evolution and cosmological structure formation. The Local Group represents an importanttest bench to investigate these processes with very high accuracy and spatial resolution based on large observational data sets. In this talk, I will review the various gas components in the circumgalactic media of MW and M31 and in the LG intragroup medium and discuss their chemical composition, kinematics, and mass-flow rates in the context of the on-going formation of the MW and Local Group. Recent results from our observational surveys with HST and constrained cosmological MHD simulations will be presented. [more]

Evolutionary population synthesis models: What has MaStar even done for us?

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation

Very Massive Stars (VMS)

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation

Galactic Winds: From the Central Engine to the Circumgalactic Medium

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
This review will summarize the latest results from multi-wavelengthstudies of gas and dust flows out of nearby and distantgalaxies. After a brief discussion of the basic physics and opentheoretical issues, I will present recent results on the origin ofwinds on sub-pc scales in nearby star-forming and activegalaxies. Next, I will describe multiphase galaxy-scale outflows indwarf galaxies and powerful quasars and their impact on the hostgalaxies. Finally, I will assess the latest observational evidence forgalactic winds reaching 100+ kpc scales out to the circumgalacticmedium. [more]

Going Non-Linear: Contrasting LCDM with the internal properties of galaxies

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
The Lambda Cold Dark Matter (LCDM) paradigm has been spectacularly successful at reproducing observations of the cosmic microwave background and of the large scale structure of the Universe. On these scales, the structures contrasted with the theory are in the linear or mildly non-linear regime, where observations are well established and theoretical predictions are robust. LCDM also makes specific predictions in the non-linear regime; in particular, for the evolution, abundance, structure, and substructure of dark matter halos, the sites of galaxy formation. On these non-linear scales a number of potential challenges to LCDM have been identified when confronting the observed internal structure of galaxies with LCDM expectations. I plan to review briefly the status of these challenges and to discuss whether they signal a potential breakdown of the LCDM paradigm or just reflect our incomplete understanding of the complex process of galaxy formation. [more]

Chemical abundances as fingerprints of galaxy evolution

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
The evolution of chemical abundances in galaxies provides crucial information to study how they formed and evolved. Results in the Local Universe show that on average, star-forming gas-phase in galaxies have negative metallicity gradients and that flat and inverted positive gradients could be associated with galaxy interactions and gas accretion. As a function of redshift, there seems to be an increase of the fraction of inverted metallicity gradients. In this talk I will summarize our latest finding on the evolution of the metallicity gradients as a function of stellar mass, galaxy size and star formation efficiency up to z~2.5 in the EAGLE project. I will also show first results on a study of the processes that shape metallicity gradients with the CIELO simulations. [more]

Multi-Phase Gas Physics in the CGM

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
I discuss small scale physical processes which affect the formation and survival of warm (T ~ 10^4 K) gas in the CGM, which is crucial for fueling star formation in the host galaxy. In particular, I will discuss thermal instability in the presence of magnetic fields and cosmic rays, and cold gas survival during infall onto the galaxy. [more]

Exploring the First Billion Years with JWST

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) successfully launched last year on Christmas Day. It is the largest and most sensitive astronomical telescope in space, working at infrared wavelengths 0.8-24 microns. Since completing commissioning in June, JWST has been making spectacular observations of the Universe. In this talk I will focus on what JWST is discovering about the most distant galaxies, within the first billion years of the Big Bang (at redshifts beyond 5). In particular, I will describe our observations using the near-infrared spectrograph, NIRSpec (obtained for our Instrument Science Team) as part of the JADES survey. With JWST, we can obtain spectroscopic redshifts for the faintest galaxies seen by the Hubble Space Telescope, and we can push even fainter with JWST NIRCam images. We can determine the star formation rates, metallicities, stellar masses and conditions of the inter-stellar medium in these distant galaxies to compare with lower-redshift samples and hence chart galaxy evolution. JWST observations will also address the role of star formation in these early galaxies in re-ionzing the intergalactic medium. [more]

Star cluster formation, feedback and evolution across cosmic times

MPA Special Seminar on Galaxy Formation
In the era of multi wavelength surveys of unprecedented sensitivity and spatial resolution, we are now able to map star cluster formation from the very early phases (deeply embedded in their natal giant molecular clouds) as well as study their feedback on the interstellar medium not only in the local universe but across cosmic times. I will present some key results obtained from our initial JWST observations of the nearby galaxy NGC628. Combinations of NIR and MIR colors as well as MIR emission lines like Br_alpha and the 3.35 micron PAH band help us, for the first time, to fully map the star clusters from deeply embedded phases to late stages, when AGB stars dominate their colors. Comparisons between observed IR colors and stellar evolutionary tracks show how current stellar evolutionary models fail to reproduce all the cluster’s phases. I will show results that link cluster feedback to different ISM phases from 10s to 100 s of parsec scales. I will discuss how studying star clusters in the local universe remains a fundamental laboratory for understanding cluster formation and evolution in rapidly evolving galaxies across cosmic time. Gravitational telescopes and JWST capabilities have opened a new era for cluster studies in young galaxies. I will present our initial study of star clusters and stellar clumps in galaxies between redshift 1 and 6 that help us to reconstruct the conditions where proto-globular clusters formed. [more]

Visualizing simulations of turbulence and beyond

Visualizing simulations of turbulence and beyond
A 1-day workshop providing a broad technical overview of techniques and tools available for visualizing (turbulent) (M)HD simulation data. Speakers will present: (i) in-depth introduction to the capabilities of popular and modern tools for different visualization, including in-situ and real-time; (ii) examples of high-end scientific visualizations by its authors, focused on the techniques employed and obstacles faced. The workshop is open to all scientists interested. [more]

A Frequentist's Guide to LambdaCDM Extensions

Special MPA Seminar

EU Grants and Fellowships for Post-Docs in Horizon Europe

EU Grants and Fellowships for Post-Docs in Horizon Europe
We will inform you about funding opportunities for individual researchers within the European Research Framework Programme Horizon Europe, particularly about the Marie Sklodowska Curie Postdoctoral Fellowships and the ERC Starting and Consolidator Grants. PhD students are also very welcome to join! [more]

Exotic particle searches with NA62 in beam-dump mode

Munich Dark Matter Meeting

The high-redshift circumgalactic medium in cosmological simulations

MPA Informal Talk

The Statistics Behind 3D Interstellar Dust Maps of the Milky Way

Bayes Forum - Talk

The Evolving “Big Picture” of Galaxy Formation: a Scientific (and Sociological) Retrospective

Biermann lectures 2024: Galaxies and Intergalactic Matter at Cosmic “Late Morning”
All lectures take place in the MPA Large Seminar Room E.0.11 and will be preceded by tea, coffee and cookies at 15 minutes before the lecture starts. [more]

Reconciling Observations of Stars and Gas, Emission and Absorption, in the Adolescent Universe

Biermann lectures 2024: Galaxies and Intergalactic Matter at Cosmic “Late Morning”
All lectures take place in the MPA Large Seminar Room E.0.11 and will be preceded by tea, coffee and cookies at 15 minutes before the lecture starts. [more]

Q: Is Galaxy Formation “Solved”? Discuss.

Biermann lectures 2024: Galaxies and Intergalactic Matter at Cosmic “Late Morning”
All lectures take place in the MPA Large Seminar Room E.0.11 and will be preceded by tea, coffee and cookies at 15 minutes before the lecture starts. [more]
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