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Astronomy Colloquium Series Presents:

Dr. Rongmon Bordoloi, Assistant Professor, North Carolina Stat University
Thursday, March 18, 2021
3:30-4:30 PM
Off Campus Location
A Tale of Circumgalactic Gas: Large and Small scales

In recent years, our understanding of how galaxies form and evolve have matured dramatically. The newest set of numerical simulations can successfully reproduce both the stellar content of galaxies and their large scale statistical properties. However, these models still fail to match the observed properties of the diffuse gas, which span hundreds of kiloparsecs beyond the visible stellar disks of the galaxies. Understanding the complex physical processes that dictate this circumgalactic space is a crucial next step towards creating a comprehensive model of galaxy evolution. I will highlight new ways to characterize this illusive diffuse media both in small and large scales. I will also relate how ubiquitously observed circumgalactic HI relates with the ionized reservoirs of circumgalactic gas around galaxies. Such observations will provide empirical bedrocks to identify the dominant mechanisms that govern the circumgalactic gas in driving galaxy evolution.

Should you require any accommodations to ensure equal access and opportunity related to this event, please contact Stacy Tiburzi at 734-764-3440 or stibu@umich.edu.
Building: Off Campus Location
Location: Virtual
Website:
Event Type: Lecture / Discussion
Tags: astronomy, astrophysics, Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering, physics
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Department of Astronomy, Department of Physics, Michigan Institute for Research in Astrophysics