Events
Ingrid Stairs
Tuesday, November 10 2020
4:00pm
only via zoom
The CHIME telescope, originally planned for Hydrogen intensity mapping, has two instruments sensitive to rapidly varying sources: a pulsar backend which processes tracking beams produced by the correlator, and a Fast Radio Burst (FRB) detector searching for these still-mysterious millisecond signals. I’ll present some of the early results from both instruments, including the many things CHIME has already taught us about FRBs, and the planned contributions of the Pulsar instrument to the NANOGrav gravitational-wave background search.
Speaker
- Ingrid Stairs, University of British Columbia
Host
Event Contact
- Debbie Meinbresse