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Kavli Fulldome Lecture Series: The Cosmos in a Heartbeat

  • November 09, 2018
  • 7:30 PM
  • Adler Planetarium, Chicago

A human lifetime is more than a hundred billion times shorter than the current age of the Universe. Whether you are a professional astronomer, or a casual backyard stargazer, you have only a few decades to drink it all in—to wonder how it works and how you got here.


The cosmos is full of strange happenings that we sometimes are lucky enough to witness because we happened to be paying attention to the stories the Universe is telling us. These tales are carried on bursts of light, showers of subatomic particles, and the faint whisperings of gravity, and every day that passes, we’re getting better at deciphering them.


In our lifetimes, we will only ever have a glimpse of the cosmos. But that glimpse is enough to transform our perceptions in dramatic ways and to answer the oldest questions we have about what the Universe is doing all around us.


Click here for complete details.


Event Schedule and Pricing


Friday, November 9


7:30 pm: Lecture in the Grainger Sky Theater

$10 General Public
$5 Members, Students, and Friends of the Webster Institute

This lecture will also be streamed live via YouTube 360! Those interested in viewing the lecture outside of the Adler (from anywhere in the world!) are encouraged to tune-in using their phone, tablet, or desktop.


Saturday, November 10


12:00 pm: Lecture in the Grainger Sky Theater

$17 General Public (Includes General Admission to the museum)
$5 Members, Students, and Friends of the Webster Institute


About the Speaker

Shane Larson is a research associate professor of physics at Northwestern University, where he is the Associate Director of CIERA (Center for Interdisciplinary Exploration and Research in Astrophysics). He works in the field of gravitational wave astrophysics, specializing in studies of compact stars, binaries, and the galaxy. He works in gravitational wave astronomy with both the ground-based LIGO project and the future space-based detector LISA.

Shane grew up in eastern Oregon and was an undergraduate at Oregon State University where he received his B.S. in Physics in 1991. He received a Ph.D. in theoretical physics (1999) from Montana State University. He is an award-winning teacher and a Fellow of the American Physical Society.

He currently lives in the Chicago suburbs with his wife, daughter, and cats. He contributes regularly to a public science blog at writescience.wordpress.com, and tweets with the handle @sciencejedi.



About cgcc

The Chicago Gifted Community Center (CGCC) is a member-driven 501(c)(3) non-profit organization created by parents to support the intellectual and emotional growth of gifted children and their families. 

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