A 6x6 black bar across the top. A 2x2 white bar across the top.

Search this website using Google
 
The Royal Society of New South Wales Title
Home  News & Events Lectures & Meetings Membership Publications Library Awards The Society Links

TALKS

Details of our talks can be found here.

Sydney Meetings

Sydney Meetings 2010
Sydney Meetings 2009
Sydney Meetings 2008
Sydney Meetings 2007
Sydney Meetings 2006
Sydney Meetings 2005
Sydney Meetings 2004
Sydney Meetings 2003
Sydney Meetings 2002
Sydney Meetings 2001
Sydney Meetings 2000
Sydney Meetings 1999
Sydney Meetings 1998

Southern Highlands Branch Meetings

SHB Meetings 2006
SHB Meetings 2005
SHB Meetings 2004
SHB Meetings 2003
SHB Meetings 2002
SHB Meetings 2001
SHB Meetings 1999

Pollock Memorial Lecture 2009

The Universe from Beginning to End

Dr Brian Schmidt, Federation Fellow, Mount Stromlo Observatory, ANU

The Pollock Memorial Lecture is presented jointly by the University of Sydney and the Royal Society of NSW. The Lectureship has been awarded about every four years since 1949 and is sponsored by the University of Sydney and the Royal Society of NSW in memory of Professor J.A. Pollock, Professor of Physics at the University of Sydney (1899-1922) and a member of the Society for 35 years.

Date: Wednesday, 30th April, 2009
Time: 6.30pm
Location: Eastern Avenue Auditorium, University of Sydney
Cost: Free
Contact: School of Physics Outreach
Phone: (02) 9351 3383, Email: outreach@physics.usyd.edu.au

ABSTRACT

Despite hundreds of years of dedicated scientific research, we only know what 4% of the Universe is made up of. In the last 15 years we have realised that there is another 96% of missing stuff that we just can't see. This missing stuff is made up of two mysterious substances, Dark Matter and Dark Energy, that are battling for domination of the Universe.

In the Pollock Memorial Lecture, Professor Brian Schmidt, from the Australian National University, will describe exciting new experiments, including those using the SkyMapper telescope, that are monitoring the struggle between these two dark forms. The aim is to predict the ultimate fate of the Cosmos!

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES

Professor Brian Schmidt is a Federation Fellow at the Australian National University's Mount Stromlo Observatory. While at Harvard University in 1994 he formed the High Z SN Search team, a group of 20 astronomers on five continents who used distant exploding stars to trace the expansion of the Universe back in time. This group's discovery of an accelerating Universe was named Science Magazine's Breakthrough of the Year for 1998. Brian is continuing his work using exploding stars to study the Universe, and is leading Mt Stromlo's effort to build the SkyMapper telescope, a new facility that will provide a comprehensive digital map of the southern sky from ultraviolet to near infrared wavelengths.