The James Webb Space Telescope at the Edge of the Universe
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The James Webb Space Telescope at the Edge of the Universe

Seeing the most distant galaxies yet

By Mexborough & Swinton Astronomical Society

Date and time

Location

Online

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event.

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours 30 minutes

This hybrid meeting is available live via Zoom for ticket holder

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The James Webb Space Telescope launched on Christmas Day in 2021, and is now making spectacular observations of the Universe. Our speaker, Andy Bunker, will describe his involvement on the instrument science team of the near-infrared spectrograph on Webb, including the discovery of the most distant objects known - which we currently hold the record for.
We are using this instrument to find galaxies at immense distances, when the Universe was very young, and to measure the rate at which stars are being born in these galaxies.
We are also searching for the first generations of stars to appear in the Universe.

Andy Bunker is a Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Oxford.
He did an undergraduate degree and PhD at Oxford, and postdoctoral research at the University of California, Berkeley, and Cambridge. Before returning to Oxford in 2008, he was Head of Astronomy at the Anglo Australian Observatory, based in Sydney.
Andy's research involves using large telescopes to study galaxies at enormous distances, observing with telescopes in Hawaii and Chile. He has frequently worked with data from the Hubble Space Telescope, and was the first to analyse the Ultra Deep Field images (the most sensitive picture of the Universe yet taken). Since 2005 he has been on the European Space Agency instrument science team for the near-infrared spectrograph on the James Webb Space Telescope.

Organized by

Mexborough & Swinton Astronomical Society

£2.88