Priestman Lectures - Scientific Colloquium-FR

Event Date(s):
October 03, 2019
Time(s):
03:00 PM - 05:00 PM
Category:
Fredericton
Location:
Fredericton

Event Details:

The Faculty of Science is pleased to announce this year's Priestman Lecture with Canadian Nobel Laureate Arthur McDonald presenting, "Understanding the Universe from Deep Underground."  (Art McDonald, Queen’s University, Kingston, ON)

By going deep underground in SNOLAB near Sudbury, Ontario and creating ultra-clean detectors it is possible to address some very fundamental questions about our Universe: How does the Sun burn? What are the dark matter particles making up 26% of our Universe? What are the properties of neutrinos, elusive particles that are one of the fundamental building blocks of nature? How do these particles influence how our Universe evolves? With the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) we went 2 km underground to observe new properties of neutrinos that extend the Standard Model of Elementary Particles and also confirm that the models of how the Sun burns are very accurate. With the SNO+ experiment we are studying further properties of neutrinos using a conversion of the SNO detector to search for neutrino-less double beta decay. Through the Global Argon Dark Matter Collaboration, involving the CANFRANC (Spain), Gran Sasso (Italy), SNOLAB (Canada) and CANFRANC (Spain) underground laboratories and more than 350 international scientists, we hope to push the sensitivity for detecting Dark Matter particles by more than a factor of 100 and perhaps observe a whole new type of matter. All of these topics will be included in a lecture for a general scientific audience

Building: Bailey Hall

Room Number: 146 (Auditorium)

Contact:

Karen Palmer
1 506 453 4841
Karen.Palmer@unb.ca