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| Mathematics Awareness Month(Spring 2005) |
| DATE | PLACE & TIME | SPEAKER | TOPIC/ABSTRACT |
| Wednesday, Apr 13th, 2005 | PSF 173 Time: 6p.m. |
Arlie Peters, Duke University |
Topic:
GRAVITY'S COSMIC MIRAGES: A Mathematical Unveiling Abstract: Galaxies can act like lenses, creating cosmic mirages. One such mirage is the occurrence of multiple images of distant light sources, an effect predicted by Einstein in 1936. Strikingly, these mirages allow us to probe one of the mysteries of the universe -- the nature of dark matter. Though dark matter is invisible, it can be revealed through its action as a gravitational lens. This talk gives an introduction to the vibrant subject of gravitational lensing and a tour of the mathematical underpinnings of these cosmic mirages. |
| Tuesday, Apr 26th, 2005 | PSH 135 Time:3:40p.m.-4.30p.m. |
Jeff Hester, Arizona State University |
Topic: Physical Insight, Mathematical Formalism, and the
Limits on our Knowledge of the Universe Our evolving understanding of the Cosmos offers a wonderful illustration of this interplay. From the simple geometrical cosmology of the Greeks, to Galileo's telescope, to the elegance of Newton's Principia, to the modern vistas of the Hubble and Chandra Observatories, to the mathematics of complexity and beyond, the history of our evolving understanding of the Universe has been a history of the interplay between mathematics and science. But what are the limitations on this remarkable collaboration? Karl Popper's "The Logic of Scientific Discovery" lays out the ground rules for answering that question. Insights into the world obtained through mathematics are never better than the falsifiable predictions they allow us to make about the outcomes of further observation and experiment. The loop must be closed. But what do we do when the mathematics of successful and testable theories of the Universe require us to accept extraordinary statements about realities that can never be observed, even in principle? For modern astronomers and cosmologists, this question is anything but academic. At the end of the day, what does it mean "to know," and what are the limits on that knowledge? |