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Friday, October 02, 2015
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Cahill 370

TAPIR Seminar

Pulsar timing limit on gravitational waves necessitates re-think of binary supermassive black hole evolution
Vikram Ravi, Millikan Postdoctoral Scholar, Dept of Astronomy, Caltech,
Speaker's Bio:
Dr. Ravi is a Millikan postdoc fellow in the Caltech astronomy department, with interests in the physics of collapsed objects and explosions both galactic and extragalactic, structure formation, instrumentation for time-domain astronomy, and extraterrestrial life. He did his undergrad degree at the Australian National University, and PhD at the University of Melbourne with Prof. Stuart Wyithe and Dr. George Hobbs. He has also worked at the UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab and Swinburne University.

Mergers of massive galaxies are thought to host binary supermassive black holes, which are driven to coalesce by their gravitational-wave emission. For the last decade, collaborations worldwide have been searching for signatures of these gravitational waves in millisecond radio pulsar timing data. The design sensitivities of these experiments, based on theoretical predictions, have now been surpassed. However, no gravitational waves have been detected. This startling result necessitates a shift in thinking on the fates of supermassive black holes in galaxy mergers, or indeed on the supermassive black hole occupation fraction. I will describe recent results from the Parkes Pulsar Timing Array collaboration, and their implications for supermassive black hole and galaxy assembly.

For more information, please contact JoAnn Boyd by phone at 4280 or by email at [email protected].