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Special Colloquium

Title
The History of the Universe from the beginning to the end: where did we come from, where can we go? A special lecture in memory of M.M. "Dunc" Duncan  
Guest Speaker
Dr. John Mather  
Guest Affiliation
Nobel Prize winner and senior astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center  
Guest Affiliation Url
https://www.nasa.gov/goddard  
When
Thursday, April 7, 2016 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm  
Location
Physics Auditorium (202)  
Details

I will outline the history of the universe from its early moments in the Big Bang, to the possible end. Our history is full of beneficial catastrophes, and we wouldn't be here without them: stars explode, the Moon is formed in a giant collision with the Earth, the Earth is bombarded by asteroids and comets for hundreds of millions of years, and multiple extinction events through hot, cold, poison, and asteroid impacts cause rapid evolution of life. But here we are, our ancestors survived and thrived through it all. Now, we can tell the story, we can look for more details, and we can begin to adventure through the solar system and eventually beyond, in partnership with a new entity, artificial intelligence coupled with robotics. Scientific discovery has been propelled by competition (including war) for thousands of years, so it's immensely important to public policy. I will illustrate with examples from NASA, including our measurements of the Big Bang, discoveries with the Hubble, and future telescopes like the James Webb Space Telescope (planned for 2018 launch) and beyond. Within a few decades, we may know that life is common in the universe, or perhaps not.

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