Skip to main content

@the ASP

Events

SVLS online: "Observing with the James Webb Space Telescope: Glimpsing the First Stars" with Dan Coe (Space Telescope Science Institute)

Wednesday, November 13; 7pm PT/10pm ET

On Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2024 at 7 pm (PDT), Dr. Dan Coe (Space Telescope Science Institute) will give a free, illustrated, non-technical lecture entitled:

“Observing with the James Webb Space Telescope: Glimpsing the First Stars"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This virtual talk is part of the Silicon Valley Astronomy Lecture Series (through Foothill College), now in its 25th year.

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was designed to look back in time, to study the first generation of stars, and reveal our cosmic origins. In what is only its second year of operation, JWST has already brought us tantalizingly close to our dream of seeing those first stars. Dr. Coe will tell us about observations of “Earendel,” the most distant star known, seen as it was 13 billion years ago. And we will marvel at the beauty of even more distant star clusters, including the Arc of Cosmic Gems. These objects were some the most important discoveries from his Hubble observing program, among them the galaxy cluster SMACS 0723 that became JWST's first stunning deep field. Soon the Euclid and Roman telescopes will survey much more of the sky, providing many more exciting targets for JWST to study in detail.

Dan Coe is an ESA/AURA Astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. STScI is home to JWST mission control and science operations, where staff scientists like Dan support other astronomers using Hubble and JWST. Dan has also led the Hubble RELICS and JWST Cosmic Spring science teams in discovering and studying some of the most distant galaxies known in the early universe. Dan graduated from Cornell University, obtained his PhD from Johns Hopkins, and did postdocs at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and STScI before joining the STScI staff in 2013.

This presentation will be a Virtual Livestream event due to the remodeling of the Smithwick Theater at Foothill College.

The lecture is co-sponsored by:

* Foothill College Science, Tech, Engineering & Math Division
* SETI Institute
* Astronomical Society of the Pacific

Close