Recent Developments in Pulsar Astronomy and Astrophysics
Time : Monday, September 23th, 10:00am
Location: Small meeting room, 3rd floor
Title : Recent Developments in Pulsar Astronomy and Astrophysics
Lecturer: Prof. R. N. Manchester
Institute: CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, Sydney Australia
Abstract:
There are now more than 2250 pulsars known, almost all lying within our Galaxy. As well as providing an excellent basis for a wide range of pulsar-related studies, these surveys have turned up many interesting pulsars, including several high-mass binary pulsars and a magnetar near the Galactic Centre. Recent timing studies have provided new tests of theories of relativistic gravity, all so far consistent with Einstein’s general theory of relativity. Pulsar Timing Array projects have established a pulsar-based timescale and given limits on the gravitational-wave background that significantly constrain standard models for galaxy evolution and the formation of super-massive black holes in galaxy cores. Prospects for pulsar astronomy with the new large single-dish radio telescopes in China will be reviewed.
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Speaker:9:30am, August 01th, Tuesday
Time:Yan Gong (Max-Planck-Institute for Radio Astronomy)
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:9:30 am July 27th (Thursday)
Time:Junhao Liu (East Asian Observatory)
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:Wednesday, July 26th 3:00pm
Time:Dr. Pinghui Huang (黄平辉)
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:7月14日,星期五,上午10点
Time:闫大海(云南大学)
Location:1715
Speaker:3:00 pm July 13th (Thursday)
Time:Shuang Zhou (University of Nottingham)
Location:Lecture Hall, 3rd floor
Speaker:1:30 pm July 6th (Thursday)
Time:Prof. Wen-Ping Chen (National Central University)
Location:Lecture Hall, 3rd floor