

Thu 14 Mar
|Queen's House
How to Kill a Galaxy: Black Holes, Noisy Neighbours, and Cosmic Car Crashes
by Dr Tim Davis of the University of Cardiff Galaxies are a key building block of our universe, that grow over time through accretion of gas and star formation. DETAILS ON HOW TO BOOK FOR THIS EVENT ARE EMAILED TO MEMBERS IN THE WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
Time & Location
14 Mar 2024, 19:15 – 21:00
Queen's House, Romney Rd, London SE10 9NF, UK
About the Event
Galaxies are a key building block of our universe, that grow over time through accretion of gas and star formation. However, it seems our universe does not allow galaxies to go on building up forever. Instead, in many cases, their “active” lives seem to be truncated - leaving them “red and dead”, evolving passively at the present day.
In this talk, Dr Tim Davis will discuss the variety of processes we think act to kill galaxies: from the impact of supermassive black holes lurking in their hearts, through the perils of living in an environment with lots of other galaxies, to the extreme processes ongoing in a galaxy collusion. He will illustrate this with snapshots of his own work using state-of-the-art observations from large telescopes all over the globe, and computer simulations of galaxy formation that let us conduct controlled experiments. Together these techniques let us explore how the universe…