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Public talk - Getting inside the Aurora

May 15
Thu 6:30 PM
Location
Public talk - Getting inside the Aurora
Slade Lecture Theatre, ground floor, School of Physics
Sydney
Who attended?
It's estimated that  2  people attended.
Who organized?

Public talk - Slade Lecture Theatre, School of Physics, The University of Sydney.

Presented by Professor James Labelle, University of Sydney International Visiting Research Fellow and Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, USA.
Come to this fully illustrated public lecture and find out what the Aurora is all about from a scientist who flies rockets loaded with scientific instruments through the ionosphere as it glows and shimmers with Auroral activity.

COST: Free, with booking.
RSVP: 9351 3383 or outreach@physics.usyd.edu.au with name and number of seats required.

The Southern Lights, or Aurora, dance in the sky above Antarctica, occasionally reaching Tasmania and, on rarer occasions, New South Wales. What causes these flickering lights to appear in the sky and move the way they do?

We have been studying Aurorae for more than a century, but we still have much to learn. However the addition of rocket- and satellite-based instruments to measurements from the ground has opened new horizons in our quest to understand the complex plasma that inhabits our upper atmosphere.

Aside from being fascinating and beautiful Physics, the study of the Aurora has real implications for the reliability of many of our satellite-based communications and GPS systems, as physicists begin to understand and forecast space weather.

Come to this fully illustrated public lecture and find out what the Aurora is all about from a scientist who flies rockets loaded with scientific instruments through the ionosphere as it glows and shimmers with Auroral activity.

Speaker:
Professor James LaBelle really is a rocket scientist, at Dartmouth College, USA. He studied physics and applied physics at Stanford and Cornell Universities in the USA. He worked on experimental Space Physics at several laboratories in the USA and Germany before joining the faculty at Dartmouth College in 1989.

He leads a team of scientists and engineers making rocket- and ground-based measurements of aurorae in both the Northern and Southern Hemisphere, and is visiting the School of Physics under their Denison distinguished visitor scheme during March, April and May.

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  • Rachael Dunlop
    Posted May 15, 2008 8:53 PM
    • Assistant Organizer
    Hey Tom, the meeting was great and good news for you - another Professor, a colleague of James Labelle will give another talk in 1 to 2 months also about auroras. I will let you know as soon as a date is locked in. Tonight was very very interesting. You are in for a treat!
  • Rachael Dunlop
    Posted May 15, 2008 3:00 PM
    • Assistant Organizer
    Hey Tom, this meeting has been up for at least a week if not longer. Sorry you didn't get the email earlier. Maybe you should just check the meet-up site if emails are not getting through to you. Bugger spam!
  • Tom
    Posted May 14, 2008 3:12 PM
    Tom
    This would have been a good lecture. However all too often we only get notice the day before and may miss the email. I don't know if the delay is in Meetup or my ISP as I have had that problem recently and I check my email every day. email seems to arrive in "bursts". Must be the spammers?

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