Episode 64: Echoing Through Space, with Doug Welch

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Feature Guest: Doug Welch

doug

Imagine being able to go back centuries to study the great supernovae of the past. Tycho’s nova of 1572 for example. Now we may be able to do the next best thing. Astronomers have discovered a phenomena known as light echoes which allow us to study long ago supernova events from our past and find supernova we never even knew occurred. To help us understand these mysterious light echoes, which can give the illusion of superluminal speeds, Doug Welch joins Justin Trottier at The Star Spot.

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Current in Space

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About our Guest

Doug Welch is Professor of Physics and Astronomy at McMaster University and formerly served as Chair of the department. He received his PhD from the University of Toronto, worked at the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics’s Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in Victoria, BC. He has been awarded the McNeil Medal of the Royal Society of Canada for the promotion and communication of science and is currently Vice Chair of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Corporation. His research has led him from studies of dark matter to a current focus on supernova light echoes.

Links

Doug Welch Website 

‘Light echoes’ replay long-ago star show: CBC news

Video of Doug’s talk on his art installation at the McMaster Museum of Art entitled “Light Echo” which ran between September 17 and October 31, 2009. 

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