suspect that that headline isn’t what you were expecting from my blog (I’ll buy you all a drink if I ever write an article entitled ‘Evidence for intergalactic war’, mind you), but it’s one of the conclusions from the talks at the conference I’m attending.
Let me back track a bit. It’s day three of […]
While yesterday morning’s talks focused on the general population of stars in the Milky Way, the last two talks of the day told us a little of what can be learnt by looking at more unusual stars. David Lai of UC Santa Cruz took us through the results of his studies of some of the […]
My Galaxy Zoo colleague Steven Bamford (now at the University of Nottingham) is here in Chicago and gave an excellent talk yesterday unpicking some of our results. In particular, he’s been examining the question of how the colour of a galaxy relates to its shape. You only have to look at a few Hubble images […]
Much of the excitement at the SDSS conference this morning is about the detection of streams of stars in the outer reaches of the Milky Way. You can read more about how observations and theory are coming together over here.
I’m currently in Chicago at a conference to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, more about which later. However, Gerry Gilmore from the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge is speaking on his work on the smallest and faintest galaxies. While last - at least by luminosity - these objects are […]