Fwd: Free Program about the Kepler Mission Hunt for Others Earths at the Lawrence Hall of Science June 30
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Melinda L. Weil
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Jun 15, 2011, 4:59:03 PM6/15/11
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You and your students are invited to a free public seminar:
Are We Alone?: Results about Planets Elsewhere from the Kepler
Mission
Date: June 30, 2011
Time: 7:00-9:30 pm
Place: Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California, Berkeley
For directions to the Hall, see:
http://www.lawrencehallofscience.org/visit/info
Free and open to the public. Seating is first-come, first
served.
Once humanity realized that every star is a Sun like our own, we
naturally wondered whether these other stars also have planets. And
could those planets be earth-like enough to be homes to more or less
intelligent beings like ourselves? Astronomers have only known
about planets elsewhere for the last 15 years and finding other Earths is
a challenge we are only now able to address. Today, NASA 's Kepler
mission is discovering thousands of planets orbiting other stars and for
the first time finding strong hints that other Earths (and not just other
Jupiters and Saturns) really exist. This non-technical seminar
features a panel of key investigators from the NASA Kepler Mission
Science Team, who will share the latest mission discoveries, hints about
what we might learn in the coming year, and their insights into the
age-old question "Are we alone?"
Panelists:
• Bill Borucki, Principal Investigator, NASA Kepler Mission, Ames
Research Center, Mountain View, CA
• Natalie Batalha, Co-Investigator and Deputy Science Team Lead for the
NASA Kepler Mission, Professor of Physics and Astronomy at San Jose State
University, and lead author for the discovery of the first nearly
Earth-size rocky planet.
• Gibor Basri, Co-Investigator for NASA Kepler Mission and professor in
the Department of Astronomy at University of California, Berkeley
• Moderator: Andrew Fraknoi, Astronomical Society of the Pacific, and
Chair of Astronomy Department at Foothill College, Los Altos Hills,
CA
“Astronomers have cracked the Milky Way like a piñata, and planets are
now pouring out so fast that they do not know what to do with them
all.” - Dennis Overbye, New York Times, Feb. 2, 2011
Paul
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Jun 16, 2011, 12:02:41 PM6/16/11
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