Michigan Astronomy

News & Events

blue stars in M105

3rd Annual AOSS/Astronomy/EES Research Symposium

This year's symposium theme is "Planetary Astrobiology." It will be on Wednesday April 18, 2012 from 2:00 to 5:00pm in 1528 CC Little Bldg. It includes a keynote address by Dr. Mike Brown of CalTech and presentations by Jim Slavin (AOSS) , Nuria Calvet (Astronomy), and Greg Dick (EES). For more informaiton, visit the Special Events page.

Star formation not primarily quenched by black hole activity in nearby
elliptical galaxies

Two new papers place a lower limit on the number of nearby elliptical galaxies with central supermassive black holes, and suggest that the large-scale environment matters more to their star formation rate than does low-level black hole activity. Read more about observations of elliptical galaxies...

An Unusual Planetary Disk

Professor Emeritus Charles Cowley led an international team of astronomers who discovered a very unusual disk around another star. Read more about the unusual disk...

MOJAVE Recognized by NRAO Program

The MOJAVE project, which UMRAO participates in, was recently designated a Key Science Project by the NRAO. Read more about this prestigious designation...

blue stars in M105Most Massive Black Holes Discovered So Far

The discovery of two 10-billion-solar-mass black holes in nearby galaxies helps resolve a lingering question about what powered luminous quasars in the early universe. Read More about 10GMsun black holes...

New Concentration and Minor Announced

The department is pleased to announce the addition of a new concentration and minor, Interdisciplinary Astronomy, for students with an interest in Astronomy but who do not plan to become astrophysicists. Check out the flyer too!

The jobless rate for students with science degrees is very low (0% for the traditional astronomy and astrophysics major!) so it's well worth considering this new concentration as an adjunct to another program.

blue stars in M105New Dwarf Galaxies Discovered

Graduate Student Colin Slater and Professor Eric Bell discovered two new dwarf galaxies, satellites of the great Andromeda Galaxy, M31. Read More about new dwarf galaxies...

News & Events