SETI Institute Colloquium Series Videos   /     09/24/2008 - Black Holes: End of Time or a New Beginning?

Description

Prof. Roger Blandford, Stanford Linear Accelerator and Physics, Stanford UniversityBlack holes are popularly associated with death and destruction (excluding romances dealing with the redemptive properties of wormholes). However, their conventional astrophysical role is now seen as regenerative and they play a major role in the formation and evolution of galaxies stars and, arguably, organic molecules. Some possible ways in which they may impact the research of the SETI Institute will be discussed and ways in which they may have played a role in the history of our solar system will be briefly discussed.play video

Summary

Prof. Roger Blandford, Stanford Linear Accelerator and Physics, Stanford University Black holes are popularly associated with death and destruction (excluding romances dealing with the redemptive properties of wormholes). However, their conventional astrophysical role is now seen as regenerative and they play a major role in the formation and evolution of galaxies stars and, arguably, organic molecules. Some possible ways in which they may impact the research of the SETI Institute will be discussed and ways in which they may have played a role in the history of our solar system will be briefly discussed. play video

Subtitle
Prof. Roger Blandford, Stanford Linear Accelerator and Physics, Stanford University Black holes are popularly associated with death and destruction (excluding romances dealing with the redemptive properties of wormholes). However, their conventional astro
Duration
Publishing date
2009-02-25 21:40
Link
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SETI-videos/~3/5ZRPF57FCXM/09242008-black-holes-end-of-time-or-new.html
Contributors
  noreply@blogger.com (SETI Institute MarCom Services)
author  
Enclosures
http://archive.seti.org/videos/Roger-Blandford-HighLB.mov
video/quicktime