Special A&A Colloquium: Alexander Ji (Carnegie Observatories)

3:30–4:30 pm ERC 161

ERC 161

Accessing the First Stars and Galaxies with Near-Field Cosmology

In the first billion years of the universe, stars and galaxies formed in the smallest dark matter halos, produced high-energy photons that reionized the intergalactic medium, and polluted the universe with the first heavy elements. Near-field cosmology probes this early era by observing nearby relic galaxies that have survived from ancient times. In particular, the elemental abundances of their old, metal-poor stars encode otherwise inaccessible information about the first stellar populations and first galaxy formation histories. Decoding these abundances requires connecting nuclear and stellar astrophysics to galaxy formation and hierarchical assembly. In this talk, I will use elements synthesized in the rapid neutron-capture process (r-process) to illustrate how I have used stellar abundances in dwarf galaxies to study the first stars and galaxies. My work has shaped our current understanding of the origin of r-process elements, informed future multi-messenger observations of neutron star mergers, produced unique constraints on gas dynamics in the first galaxies, and now enables reconstruction of the hierarchical assembly of our Milky Way's stellar halo. I will conclude with a blueprint for how to measure the old stellar populations and early star formation histories of galaxies across the Local Group, making near-field cosmology an observational pillar for accessing the high-redshift universe.

Event Type

Colloquia, Seminars, Talks

Jan 29