The First Generation of Stars and Blackholes in the Universe

Higgs Centre colloquium

The First Generation of Stars and Blackholes in the Universe

  • Event time: 1:00pm until 2:00pm
  • Event date: 26th February 2021
  • Speaker: Naoki Yoshida (Kavli IPMU)
  • Location: Zoom Online

Event details

Modern sky surveys using large ground-based and space-borne telescopes have discovered distant stars, galaxies, and supernovae. All the rich structure in the Universe developed through gravitational amplification of primeval density fluctuations left over from the Big Bang. The standard theoretical model established by an array of recent observations accurately predicts the physical conditions in the early Universe, and powerful super-computers allow us to simulate in detail the formation and evolution of cosmic structure from an early epoch through to the present day.

I review recent impressive progress in the study on the first generation of stars, galaxies and blackholes. I present the results from state-of-the-art computer simulations, focus on the physics of early structure formation, and identify several key issues and open questions. Finally, I discuss prospects for future observations using the next generation telescopes including NASA's JWST to be launched later this year.

Passcode: higgs_20

Event resources