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- Ralph Baldwin Prize in Astrophysics and Space Science: Accreting Black Holes: Blasts from the Past
- PHYSICS 391 OPEN HOUSE CELEBRATION: Introduction to Modern Physics Laboratory
- COLLEGIATE PROFESSORSHIP INAUGURAL LECTURE: Heat Rises: 100 Years of Rayleigh-Bénard Convection
- CANCELLED Due to Travel Issues from East Coast Blizzard! ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM: Global Radiation MHD Simulations of Black Hole Accretion Disks
- MICHIGAN THEATER SCIENCE ON SCREEN: Physicist Tim Chupp Presents After Documentary
- <b>ICAM EMERGENCE SYMPOSIUM 2015</b><Br>Emergence: Compelling Examples and Unifying Approaches
- <b>SPECIAL SEMINAR</b><Br>Electrically Controlled Quibits in Silicon
- <b>SPECIAL COSMOLOGY SEMINAR</b><br>Testing Gravity Using Galaxy Redshift Surveys and CMB
- <b>COSMOLOGY - ASTROPHYSICS SEMINAR</b><br>Evading Non-Linearities: Baryon Acoustic Oscillations at the Linear Point
- Cosmology - Asrophysics Seminar: Evading Non-Linearities: Baryon Acoustic Oscillations at the Linear Point (Wed, 14 Oct 2015)
- <b>COSMOLOGY - ASTROPHYSICS SEMINAR</b><br>Cosmic Microwave Background Power Asymmetry and Non-Gaussianity
- <b>SPECIAL COSMOLOGY SEMINAR</b><br>CMB Cosmology with ACT, Planck and ACTPol
- SPECIAL COSMOLOGY SEMINAR
- <b>SPECIAL PUBLIC LECTURE<br>From the Big Bang to the End of the Time: Scientific Creativity and the Limits of Knowledge</b>
- <b>DPF2015</b>
- <b>Strongly Correlated Topological Insulators: SmB6 and Beyond Conference</b>
- SPECIAL PUBLIC LECTURE<br>Cooking up Cosmology with the Dark Energy Detectives
- <i>Jeweled Net of the Vast Invisible:<br> an experience of dark matter</i><br>Live Performance and Preview
- DES @ Michigan Collaboration Meeting
- SPECIAL PUBLIC LECTURE<br>2015 Ralph B. Baldwin Award Lecture in Astrophysics and Space Sciences<br><b>Featuring: Physics Alumnus<br>Dr. Tomasz Biesiadzinski</b><br><i>Unbiasing Cosmological Surveys</i></b>
- <b>2015 Distinguished University Innovator Award<br><i>An Academic's Adventures in Business</i></b>
- ASTRONOMY MEETING<br>Compact Objects in Michigan
- ASTRONOMY<br>Undergraduate Poster Session
- Special Physics Related Event<br><i>Orbit Design</i> - Featuring Pre-Performance Talk by Professor Robert Savit</b>
- Dissertation Defense: Vibrational Probe and Methods Development for Studying the Ultrafast Dynamics of Preferential Solvation of Biomolecules by 2D-IR
- Watch Space Jam Movie, Post Movie Physics of Basketball and Cartoon Physics Talk with Professor Tim Chupp
- 2015 HENRY RUSSEL LECTURE<br>Featuring Professor Homer A. Neal<br><i>Beyond Sputnik: Challenges Facing America's National Science Policies</i>
- BIOCOMPLEXITY SEMINAR<br>Two Vignettes in Computational Neuroscience: From Data to Models
- 2015 APS CONFERENCE FOR UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN IN PHYSICS
- MCTP HET BROWN BAG <br> Renyi Entropy, Stationarity, and Entanglement of the Conformal Scalar
- BIOCOMPLEXITY SEMINAR<br>Network Analysis of Structure-Function Relationships in Neurobiology
- TA-YOU WU LECTURE IN PHYSICS<br>The Universe: Continuing Surprises
- BIOCOMPLEXITY SEMINAR <br> The Dynamics of Calcium: Oscillations and Waves, Experiments and Theory
- MIRA & MCTP Sponsored Presentation<br><i>Stars with Neutron Cores</i>
- Special MCTP Theory Seminar<br><i>A Twistor View of String Theory</i>
- SPECIAL CONDENSED MATTER SEMINAR<br>Topological Soft Matter: From Linkages to Kink
- 2014 Decentralization Conference
- 2014 Symposium on Radiation Measurements and Applications (SORMA XV)
- The Department of Physics Graduation and Awards Ceremony
- SPECIAL MCTP COLLOQUIUM<br>Groundbreaking Discovery of Gravitational Waves from Inflation in BICEP2 Cosmic Microwave Detector
- SPECIAL CONDENSED MATTER SEMINAR<br>Measurements of Superconductivity Instabilities in Multi-orbital Systems with Spin-orbit Coupling</br>
- HOMER NEAL SYMPOSIUM
- <i>Jeweled Net of the Vast Invisible: An Experience of Dark Matter</i>
- SPECIAL SCREENING OF <i>PARTICLE FEVER</i>
- PHYSICS RESEARCH POSTER SESSION
- SPECIAL SEMINAR<br>Successfully Publishing in Physics Review Letters/The Physical Review
- SPECIAL SEMINAR<br>Simulating Pre-biotic Proto-stellar Chemistry in the Age of ALMA: The Curious Case of Glycine</br>
- SPECIAL COSMOLOGY SEMINAR<br>Consistency Tests of Gravity Using Large Scale Structure Dynamics
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Jeweled Net of the Vast Invisible, an Art and Science collaboration funded by the University of Michigan MCubed seed grant program, will run April 8 - 10 at the Duderstadt Video Production Studios. The team is comprised of Greg Tarlé (Department of Physics) Steve Rush (School of Music, Theatre and Dance), Jim Cogswell (Stamps School of Art and Design), Brian Nord (Fermilab) along with graduate students Jason Eaton (Computer Science) and Simon Alexander-Adams (Music, Theater, and Dance).
Jeweled Net is a visualization of the distribution of dark matter in the universe, based on data from a massive billion-particle computer simulation. As we travel through this space we see structures - halos, voids and filaments, which owe their existence to minute quantum fluctuations when the universe was first launched. These structures, amplified by inflation, propagated by sound and intensified by gravity, formed the invisible net that captured the matter that made up the first stars, galaxies and galaxy clusters, the “jewels” that we see as we look out on the universe today. Heavy elements forged in these stars became the raw ingredients from which our sun, our planet and life came about. We are children of the stars, literally, made of stardust created and ejected into the interstellar medium many billions of years ago. And yet this net of dark matter is invisible to the eye. Its existence can only be inferred by studying the galaxies and stars that decorate this vast invisible net. Scientists see this beauty and stand in awe of the grandeur of our universe.
The installation at the Duderstadt Center will feature a continuously running multi-channel video projection. A twenty-foot high, 180-degree panorama and acoustic environment will immerse the viewer in the vast jeweled spaces and sonic structures derived from the billions of data points simulating the distribution of dark matter. This MCubed team was formed in the hope that through art we could bring the awesome wonder that scientists experience in their study of our universe to a broader group of people. To make the invisible both visible and audible to our senses.
For more information about this exhibit, please click here.