IAA Lecture,  Wed 27 November, 7.30 p.m., Larmor Lecture Theatre, Physics building, QUB: “The Hiccups of Massive Stars”  by  Dr Charlotte Angus, Research Fellow, Astrophysics Research Centre, QUB

Abstract: Massive stars play a fundamental role in sculpting the chemical make up of the Universe. Yet our understanding of how these stars actually evolve is incomplete. In extremely massive stars, we predict that they should experience violent pulsations towards the end of their lives. These pulsations would be strong enough to remove entire layers from the outer regions of the star. However, we have so far not been able to observationally confirm that such phenomena take place. In this talk I will explore the physics behind these giant stellar hiccups, and how we might begin to search for them in the night sky.

Biography: Dr Charlotte Angus is a Research Fellow at the Queen’s University Belfast, working on a wide variety of exotic transient phenomena; from massive stellar explosions, to stars being shredded by black holes. She received her PhD at the University of Warwick in 2017, and has since worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Southampton, then won a DARK Research Fellowship at the University of Copenhagen in 2019. Since moving to QUB at the end of last year, she has infiltrated the IAA, and accidentally been elected as its co-Vice President. She has yet to successfully solve one of Terry’s Teasers. 

Admission free, all are welcome, including Light Refreshments.

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