Title: Are
We Alone?
When/Where:
on Thursday, August 20, 2009 at 1-2pm
at the
Octagon Theatre at The University of Western Australia
by Charley
Lineweaver
To be
introduced by the WA Chief Scientist, Professor Lyn Beazley.
Abstract:
The universe is a very big place......possibly infinitely big. So there are plenty of possibilities
for life to originate and evolve. We would like to know the answer to the
question “Are we alone?” Although we have not found any direct evidence for
aliens, Hollywood keeps showing us what we hope for and what we are afraid of. I
will discuss the real but indirect scientific evidence that we do
have for
trying to answer the question.
About the
speaker…
Charles H.
Lineweaver is the coordinator of the Australian National University’s Planetary
Science Institute and holds a joint appointment as an associate professor in
the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics and the Research School of
Earth Sciences. He obtained his PhD in astrophysics from the University of
California at Berkeley, supervised by George Smoot (2006 Physics Nobel Prize
for the discovery of temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave
background radiation). Lineweaver’s research areas include cosmology
(determination of the age and composition of the universe) exoplanetology (the
statistical analysis of exoplanets) and astrobiology (using our new knowledge
of cosmology to constrain life in the Universe). His research has been published
in Science, Nature, the Astrophysical Journal, Astrobiology, Scientific
American, American Journal of Physics, and Microbiology Australia. Charley
appears frequently on television explaining all aspects of astronomy and our
Universe, has lived in or traveled through 62 countries, speaks 4 languages and
was a semi-professional soccer player in Germany.
The Talk
Series: The De Laeter Youth Lecture is organized annually by the WA Branch of
the Australian Institute of Physics. It is named in honour Emeritus Professor
John De Laeter, of Curtin University. Not only is Professor De Laeter one of
Western Australia’s most noted scientists, but he has had an enormous impact on
education is Western Australia. A minor planet has been named after Professor
De Laeter in recognition of his research in astrophysics and, in 1992, was
awarded the Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for his contributions to
science, education and industry. He received a Eureka Prize in 2005, and a
Clunies Ross Science and Technology Award in 2006, and has been recognised by a
Premier’s Science Awards for his lifelong dedication to science in WA.
How to
book..
Through
your teacher.
Email Fiona
Garner [ Fiona.Garner@uwa.edu.au phone: 6488 5543 or 6488 3917 ]
with the
following information:
• School
name: • Your name:
• Student
numbers: • Year group:
• Your
contact details:
Email -
Phone -
You will
receive a confirmatory email with details including bus parking, the venue etc.