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Celestial Navigation with Roy Kilgard

November 5, 2019

Celestial Navigation with Roy Kilgard
Tuesday, November 5th
6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Free Event
Please pre-register here: Event Registration

Join Roy E. Kilgard, Wesleyan University Associate Professor of the Practice in Astronomy, on a celestial navigation journey beginning in England in the 1600s up through the mid-20th century.

Kilgard integrates the development of navigational charts and navigational instruments through the years and the connection between astronomy and navigation. His topics include how to translate what you observe as you look out at the horizon with images printed on a navigational chart, chart making, plotting navigational positions, as well as the specific tools needed for these tasks. Weather permitting; Kilgard will demonstrate historic navigational instruments alongside a modern telescope.

Professor Kilgard is an astrophysicist whose background is in high-energy astrophysics. Prior to his move to Wesleyan, he spent almost a decade at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, where he worked on the Chandra X-ray Observatory–one of NASA’s Great Observatories, and the X-ray counterpart to the Hubble Space Telescope. Professor Kilgard researches black holes in nearby galaxies with an emphasis on intermediate-mass black holes–objects with masses of hundreds to tens of thousands of times the mass of our Sun. The origins of these enigmatic objects are unclear, having only been definitively detected in the last few years, but they may provide an important clue to understanding the formation of the supermassive black holes that lie at the centers of most or all galaxies. His lectures cover a wide variety of astronomical topics, including black holes and galaxies, X-ray astronomy, historical astronomy, and astro-statistics.

Professor Kilgard grew up in south Georgia but has purged his southern accent through many years in Boston, England, and now Connecticut. His love for all things space was inspired and encouraged by his grandfather, a veteran of the space program through the Gemini and Apollo eras. In addition to his work on black holes, he has become an amateur historian, working on both the restoration of Wesleyan’s historic Clark refracting telescope and a historical exhibition on the history of astronomy in central Connecticut. When not researching X-ray binaries, he is an incurable nitpicker of sci-fi minutiae. This has infected his teaching, leading him to design courses on the intersection of Science Fiction and Astronomy, as well as his outreach, with regular guest appearances at science fiction and fantasy conventions.

 

 

Details

Date:
November 5, 2019
Event Categories:
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Venue

Connecticut River Museum
67 Main Street
Essex, CT 06426 United States
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Phone
860-767-8269
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