- All News & Features
- All Events
- Special Lectures
- K-12 Programs
- Saturday Morning Physics
-
- Subscribe
- Taping
- Past Events
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SMP 12/7/13 | Splash Gordon: The Origin of Water on Earth | Speaker: Ruud Visser
- SMP 11/23/13 | Seeing the Unseeable: Black Holes and Revelation | Speaker: Rubens Reis
- SMP 11/16/13 | Mapping the Beginning of the Universe | Speaker: Jeffrey McMahon
- SMP 11/9/13 | Making the Chicken from the Egg: A Physicist's View of Animal Development | Speaker: David Lubensky
- SMP 11/2/13 | Weighty Thoughts on the Origin of Mass | Speaker: James Wells
- SMP 10/26/13 | What It Takes to Find the Elusive Sub-Nuclear Giant! | Speaker: J. Wehrley Chapman
- SMP 10/19/13 | Hydraulic Fracturing 101: Clearing the Waters of the Fracking Debate | Speaker: Brian R. Ellis
- SMP 10/12/13 | Epidemics, Kevin Bacon, and the Internet: The Physics of Networks | Speaker: Mark Newman
-
-
-
-
-
- Fall 2016
- Winter 2017
- Fall 2017
- Winter 2018
- Fall 2018
- Winter 2019
- Fall 2019
- Winter 2020
- Fall 2020
- Winter 2021
- Fall 2021
- Winter 2022
- Fall 2022
- Winter 2023
- Fall 2023
- Winter 2024
- Fall 2024
-
- Seminars & Colloquia
The fascination with black holes as both a mathematical concept and physical entity has long been the subject of many scientific research. Only in recent years, however, have we come to realize the cosmological importance of such objects. In this talk, Dr. Reis will summarize the current status of the field after introducing the manner in which we "see" and "hear" black holes. He will also show how similar physics and phenomena observed in nearby objects allow us to detect and study the inner engines of dormant, supermassive black holes 5 billion light years away as it destroys a star.
Detailed Information
All talks are free and refreshments will be served. Visitor parking for the seminars (Central Campus) is across the street from the Dennison Building in the U-M Church Street structure. There is a $2.00 parking charge implemented by U-M Parking Services.
Contact Information
For more information regarding the Saturday Morning Physics series, see the Physics Department website, or call 734.764.4437
Speaker: |
---|