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Associated Faculty and
Web Pages listed below.
Members of the Department are heavily involved in a wide range of
research in
extragalactic astronomy.
Extragalactic Distance Scale.
Chief among extragalactic research in the department
is the determination of the extragalactic distance
scale via a variety of techniques. These
include observations of the expanding
photospheres of Type II supernovae, supernovae of Type Ia, involvement in the
HST Key project and other projects to measure Cepheid distances to nearby
calibration galaxies,
the determination of mass models for gravitational lenses
combined with measurements of the time delay between different images,
and the use of the infrared luminosity-line width relation to map the large
scale velocity field of galaxies - necessary both for the determination of the
Hubble Constant and for local large scale measurements of the mean mass density
of the universe.
Galaxies and Galaxy Systems.
Members of the Department are also leaders in the study of the internal
dynamics of galaxies and the kinematics of galaxy systems, i.e.,
groups and clusters. They
measure hot X-ray gas in galaxy coronae and in groups and clusters
of galaxies, galaxy velocities, the velocities of satellites of galaxies such
as globular clusters, and the velocities of stars in our own Milky Way's halo.
Such studies not only provide measurements of the masses of these systems but
also provide clues as to their ages and their formation and evolution.
Numerical computations addressing galaxy formation, evolution and
interactions are a major research effort in the department as well.
Gravitational Lensing.
Gravitational lens systems are the subject of intensive research at the
CfA. Detailed radio and optical observations are used
to test models of the mass distribution of the lensing object
and to model the magnification of light from the background object.
The lenses can be, e.g., small jupiters, or galaxies, or galaxy clusters.
In addition, photons travelling for a long distance towards
us interact with the gravitational potential over large scales providing
information about large scale structure. Lensing properties
indicate the distribution and quantity of mass directly, complementing other
measurements such as those of luminosity or velocities.
Gamma-ray Bursts, AGN and the High Redshift Universe.
Members of the department
are actively engaged in current and proposed studies of Gamma Ray
Bursts as
probes of the high redshift universe (Narayan, Loeb, Grindlay in links
below). Studies of active galaxies and the X-ray/gamma-ray background
are planned for deep surveys with
Chandra
and
XMM as well as possible future hard X-ray survey missions
(EXIST and
Constellation X).
See also the closely related area of
cosmology.
Associated Professors and Lecturers
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L. Greenhill,
J. Grindlay,
L. Hernquist,
J. Huchra,
R. Kirshner,
J. Lee ,
R. Narayan,
A. Loeb,
M. Lecar,
G. Rybicki,
D. Sasselov,
I. Shapiro ,
C. Stubbs
Associated Web Pages
- Full Sky Astrometric
Mapping Explorer (FAME)
- Hubble Space Telescope Key Project on
the Extragalactic Distance
Scale
- AFOE:
A Spectrograph for Precise Stellar Radial Velocity
Measurements
- DIRECT
--Distance determination to nearby galaxies
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Mid-Infrared Array Camera, MIRAC
- SIRTF, Space
Infrared Telescope Facility and
IRAC, its Infrared Camera
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SMA:
The Smithsonian Submillimeter Wavelength Array
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Redshifts in Nearby Rich Clusters
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WAXS/WXFT: Wide field X-Ray telescope
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CASTLe Survey
(CfA-Arizona Space Telescope Lens Survey of gravitational lenses)
- HST Medium Deep Survey
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Constellation X, X-Ray mission
Associated Divisions
- High Energy Astrophysics,
Optical and Infrared,
Radio and
Geoastronomy,
Theoretical Astrophysics
Back to
Research Areas in Harvard University Department of Astronomy.
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