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Listening for Cosmic Clues

As a Liberty Science Center guest astronomer, 精品成人福利在线 University Professor Marc Favata explored the ways we can 鈥榣isten鈥 to space and time

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An audience looks at a screen.
Physics Professor Marc Favata presents his Space Talk in the largest planetarium in the Western Hemisphere.

Under the cavernous dome of the Jennifer Chalsty Planetarium in the Liberty Science Center 鈥 the largest planetarium in the Western Hemisphere 鈥 精品成人福利在线 University Physics Professor Marc Favata led an audience on a listening tour of the cosmos.

In his Space Talk 鈥淐osmic Clues from Gravitational Waves鈥 on March 2, Favata explained how he and other scientists 鈥渓isten鈥 to the ripples of gravity to learn more about colliding black holes and neutron stars.

is billed as a 鈥渃osmic conversation鈥 that shines a light on new areas of astronomy. The giant dome of the planetarium is described by the Liberty Science Center as being 鈥渢he ideal venue for today鈥檚 working astronomers to share their pursuit of answers to the Big Unanswered Questions of the universe, from the secrets of black holes, to life on other planets, to the mysteries of dark matter, and beyond.鈥

In the last year alone, Space Talks have been given by astronomers from Princeton, MIT,聽 Columbia, Rutgers and CUNY as well as a member of the James Webb telescope team.

Three people stand in front of a pink screen that reads 鈥淪pace Talk: Cosmic Clues from Gravitational Waves鈥
Mark Favata, right, discusses gravitational waves with astronomy fans after his Space Talk at the Liberty Science Center.

While the Hubble and James Webb telescopes produce amazing images of our cosmos, Favata鈥檚 鈥淐osmic Clues from Gravitational Waves鈥 talk explored the way scientists listen to the ripples of gravity to observe the mysteries of space and time. Using both images and sound, he explained that the gravitational waves 鈥 which evoke the image of a pebble being dropped into a pool of water, sending out gentle ripples through the universe 鈥 provide a kind of drumbeat that reveals more about colliding black holes and neutron stars than conventional telescopes.

鈥淕ravitational waves are cool,鈥 Favata says, 鈥渁nd we can use them to explore the universe in a different way than we have before, in a way that’s more like listening than watching. I鈥檒l be talking about why they鈥檙e exciting, and what we can do with these new observations.鈥

Favata contributes to this research as a member of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration. In 2015 the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) made the first-ever detection of gravitational waves produced by the merger of two black holes.

鈥淚 want to help focus the public’s attention on that discovery,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t’s a huge project with lots of people, including myself and two other Montclair faculty members who each contribute a small piece to the bigger puzzle.鈥

Physics and Astronomy Department Chair Marc Favata

The research conducted by Favata, who is also chair of the Physics and Astronomy department, focuses on modeling gravitational-waves from colliding neutron stars and black holes, and using those waves to explore the properties of stellar collisions and test Einstein鈥檚 theory of relativity.

Favata worked with the Planetarium team to bring his research to life with images from the Webb and Hubble telescopes on the giant dome, which is 89 feet in diameter and fully digital.

鈥淒r. Favata even used sound during the talk as a means of exploring the nature of gravitational waves and the massive, distant events (collisions of distant black holes and of neutron stars) that cause them,鈥 Planetarium Director Mike Shanahan said after the Space Talk. 鈥淭he visuals on the dome helped to bring to life the collisions of these distant objects vividly, and the sounds provided a down-to-earth means of helping the audience grasp these deep-space ideas.鈥

Three people on stage.
Marc Favata, center, with Planetarium Director Mike Shanahan and Kathryn Roher, manager of AV Operations prior to Favata鈥檚 Space Talk.
After the talk, Favata spent 45 minutes answering questions in the LSC鈥檚 Weston Family Lab for Earth and Space Exploration.

鈥淚t was great fun giving a talk in the Liberty Science Center’s planetarium,鈥 Favata said afterward. 鈥淚t’s a very impressive space. The staff there were very helpful in customizing my presentation to make full use of the dome. It was a great evening, and we had lots of questions afterwards in the Weston Family Lab for Earth and Space Exploration [funded by Montclair benefactor Josh Weston闭.鈥

The Space Talk series is held on the first Thursday of each month and coincides with the events for patrons 21 and older, that include food, alcohol, dancing and exploration of the exhibits at night.

Story by Editorial Director Laura Griffin. Photos by University Photographer John J. LaRosa.

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This article was featured in the Winter 2024 edition of Montclair magazine.