McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Physical Society Colloquium

Mini-Beatty Lectures 2005/2006 - Part III

Robert Kirshner

Clowes Professor of Science, Harvard University
President, American Astronomical Society


Public Lecture

Thursday, March 30th 2006, 19:00
Leacock Auditorium

A Blunder Undone:
Exploding Stars, Dark Energy and the Accelerating Cosmos


Scientific Lecture

Friday, March 31st 2006, 15:30
Keys Auditorium, Rutherford Physics Building

Foundations of Supernova Cosmology

Observations of thermonuclear supernova explosions indicate that the expansion of the Universe is speeding up and point to the existence of dark energy. This talk will review the evidence that measuring the time history and colors (the “light curve”) of a Type Ia supernova provides a distance indicator that is good to better than 9%, making these the best extragalactic distance indicators. I will sketch the method by which the observed history of cosmic expansion is used to constrain the properties of dark energy. The dark energy appears to be consistent with the Cosmological Constant, only at much, much smaller values than predicted by fundamental physical theory. Present and future observational work from the ground can constrain the equation of state for the dark energy to 10%; future space-based missions can do much better.