The Mysterious Growth of Cold Quasars

Monday 21 March 2022, 3:00pm to 4:00pm

Venue

Online (MS Teams)

Open to

Alumni, Postgraduates, Public, Staff, Undergraduates

Registration

Registration not required - just turn up

Event Details

Astrophysics Webinar

Abstract: All galaxies host a supermassive black hole at their centers, at least a million times the mass of the Sun. Material falling onto these monsters can be as bright as the galaxy itself, or it may be lurking unseen behind thick blankets of dust. These monsters go through growth spurts and feeding frenzies that can greatly impact their host galaxies, possibly even terminating all nearby star formation. I will focus on Cold Quasars, which are some of the most luminous accreting black holes in the universe, and yet, surprisingly, their host galaxies have star formation rates of 1000 Msun/yr, casting doubt on whether black hole feedback impacts star formation at all. I will discuss how Cold Quasars are an anomaly in the current understanding of quasar formation.

If someone from outside of the Astrophysics group would like to join the seminar, please send a request to i.garland@lancaster.ac.uk

Speaker

Dr. Allison Kirkpatrick (University of Kansas)

Contact Details

Name Izzy Garland
Email

i.garland@lancaster.ac.uk