Astronomy lecture: Exploring the Gravitational Wave Universe

Astronomy lecture: Exploring the Gravitational Wave Universe

The SFAA invites you to a free presentation by Prof Brian Lantz on gravitational waves and the future of LIGO astronomy

By San Francisco Amateur Astronomers

Date and time

Location

Randall Museum Theater

199 Museum Way San Francisco, CA 94114

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours

Measuring gravitational waves is a revolutionary new way to do astronomy. In 2015, LIGO (the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory) first detected one of these waves - a tiny ripple in space itself, generated by the collision of 2 black holes. Since then, we and our international partners have measured nearly 300 signals. What can we learn from the mergers of black holes or the collision of two neutron stars? How is it possible to measure a wave which stretches our detector 1000 times less than the diameter of a proton? What's coming next in our search for these tell-tale ripples in space? Join us Wednesday night, July 15, 2025, for a talk about LIGO and the emerging astronomy of gravitational wave detection.

Prof. Brian Lantz is a Research Professor of Applied Physics at Stanford University. He started working on LIGO in 1991 as an undergraduate in Rai Weiss's lab at MIT and continued there for his Ph.D, building high-power interferometers to prototype LIGO. Prof. Lantz is the scientific leader for the Advanced LIGO seismic isolation system, and he is designing new mirror suspensions to upgrade Advanced LIGO because he loves to work on these amazing machines.https://www.sfaa-astronomy.org/event-6023781

Organized by

The San Francisco Amateur Astronomers (SFAA) has been operating since 1952 and proudly continues a long tradition of helping promote the appreciation of the wonders of the night sky within our Bay Area community.  Our club has something fun and interesting for all to do, whether a beginner or an experienced amateur. Our members are Bay Area enthusiasts who love the varied aspects of our hobby – public outreach, star viewing trips, monthly scientific lectures, telescope making, as well as private members-only dark sky viewing nights and more.

FreeJul 16 · 7:00 PM PDT