Joint UVA/NRAO Colloquium

Date & TimeThursday November 19, 2009
4:00-5:00pm
LocationNRAO Auditorium
TitleGamma-Ray Bursts: a New Probe of the High-Redshift Universe
SpeakerEdo Berger, Harvard University
AbstractGamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are the extremely powerful explosions of the most massive stars in the universe. Their optical and infrared luminosities are bright enough to be seen at least to z~10 and they thus provide a powerful probe of high redshift galaxies and the intergalactic medium. In this talk I will show that the location of GRBs within the star forming regions of galaxies affords an in-situ view of metal enrichment across a wide redshift range. In addition, follow-up observations of the host galaxies with Spitzer and HST allow us to investigate the galaxy mass-metallicity relation beyond z~2, and to delineate for the first time the properties of damped Lyman-alpha absorbers. I will also highlight some exciting recent results from GRB observations, including a naked-eye GRB at z~1 and the discovery of the most distant known object in the universe, a GRB at z~8.3.
Additional Information

Coffee will be served at 3:45.

 
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