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Professors
Charles Alcock, Professor of Astronomy
Massive compact halo objects, comets and asteroids.
David
Charbonneau, Thomas D. Cabot Associate Professor of Astronomy
Detection and characterization of planets orbiting nearby, Sun-like stars, design
and implementation of automated telescopes for photometric monitoring, formation
and structure of brown dwarfs, and searches for their low-mass companions.
Alexander Dalgarno, Phillips Professor of Astronomy
Theoretical studies of atomic, molecular, chemical, and dynamical processes
in astrophysical and atmospheric environments. Development and application of
quantum mechanical methods to atomic and molecular physics and chemistry.
Douglas Finkbeiner,
Assistant Professor of Astronomy
Observable consequences of dark matter annihilation; CMB foregrounds; Galactic
structure and evolution;Large-scale structure surveys (e.g. Sloan Digital Sky
Survey).
Alyssa A. Goodman,
Professor of Astronomy
Studies of the interstellar medium, interstellar dust and star formation, including
single-dish and interferometric spectral-line mapping, polarimetry, Zeeman observations,
infrared photometry, stellar spectroscopy, satellite observations, and theoretical
investigations.
Jonathan E. Grindlay, Robert Treat Paine Professor of Practical
Astronomy
Compact objects and binaries in globular clusters and the origin and evolution
of compact X-ray binaries. Accretion onto white dwafs, neutron stars, and black
holes. Development of a balloon-borne hard X-ray imaging telescope and future
space missions for hard X-ray observations of X-ray binaries and quasars.
Lars Hernquist, Professor of Astronomy
Theoretical studies of dynamical processes in cosmology and galaxy formation/galaxy
evolution. Numerical simulations of stellar dynamical and hydrodynamical systems.
Investigations of the physics of compact objects, particularly neutron stars
and the interplay between thermal and magnetic processes in strongly magnetized
neutron stars.
John P. Huchra,
Robert O. and Holly Thomis Doyle Professor of Cosmology
Observational cosmology; in particular, the study of the distribution and dynamics
of matter in the universe and study of the formation of structure in the universe;
also research on active galactic nuclei, X-ray sources, globular clusters around
galaxies and star formation in galaxies.
Robert P. Kirshner,
Clowes Professor of Science
Observations of supernovae, supernova remnants, galaxy dynamics and evolution,
clusters and galaxy distributions on very large scales using KPNO, CTIO, Las
Campanas, IUE, Whipple Observatory, HST, and the MMT.
Julia C. Lee, Assistant Professor of Astronomy.
Multi-wavelength (primarily X-ray) spectroscopic studies of energetic accretion
systems (X-ray binaries, AGN). Interstellar dust composition studies through
laboratory experiments and space-based observations.
Abraham Loeb,
Professor of Astronomy
Theoretical cosmology, in particular the early formation of structure in the
universe; the microwave background, and gravitational lensing.
James M. Moran,
Chairman and Donald H. Menzel Professor of Astronophysics
High angular resolution studies of radio sources, conducted with VLA and various
VLBI Networks, including H2O, OH and SiO masers in the late-type stars and newly
formed stars, compact H II regions, and quasars.
Ramesh Narayan, Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of the Natural
Sciences
Research in gravitational lensing. Accretion disks in binary neutron stars and
black holes and in galactic nuclei; scattering and scintillation; gamma ray
bursts.
George B. Rybicki, Professor of the Practice of Astronomy
Radiation processes; Radiation transfer; Spectra distortions in CMB; Reverberation
mapping of AGNs; Statistical analysis of time series.
Dimitar D. Sasselov,
Professor of Astronomy
Research in dynamic stellar atmospheres, chromospheric heating, and mass loss
through coupled hydrodynamics and radiative transfer. Galactic stellar populations
and nucleosynthesis. Submillimeter studies of star formation.
Irwin I. Shapiro, Timken University Professor
Applications of radio and radar techniques to astrometry, astrophysics, geophysics,
planetary physics, and tests of theories of gravitation.
Christopher Stubbs, Professor of Astronomy of Astronomy and
Physics
Dark energy and dark matter, observational cosmology. Astronomical instrumentation
and detector development; high performance computing applied to astronomical
data analysis. Gravitational microlensing and supernova observations. Gravitational
physics.
Patrick Thaddeus, Robert Wheeler Willson Professor of Applied
Astronomy and Professor of Applied Physics
Radio astronomy: the study of molecules in the interstellar gas; investigation
of the structure of molecular clouds and their distribution in the Milky Way
and nearby galaxies. Laboratory Spectroscopy in the millimeter-wave band of
reactive molecules.
Matias Zaldarriaga, Professor of Astronomy and Physics
Cosmology with special interest in cosmic microwave background and physics of
the early universe.
Professors Emeriti
George Field, Professor, Emeritus
Research on magnetohydrodynamics and magnetic fields in astronomy; accretion
disks in active galactic nuclei, cosmology.
Owen
Gingerich, Professor of Astronomy and of the History of Science,
Emeritus.
Investigations on a wide range of historical topics, including Nicolaus Copernicus,
Johannes Kepler, and Harlow Shapley, and also early astronomical books and instruments.
David Layzer, Professor, Emeritus
Specializes in the origin and evolution of astronomical systems.
Robert W. Noyes, Research Professor of Astronomy
Research in solar and stellar physics, including solar and stellar magnetic
activity, seismology of the sun and stars, and the search for and characterization
of planets around other stars.
Lecturers
Lori Allen,
Lecturer on Astronomy
Star formation; young stellar clusters; molecular clouds.
Raymond Blundell,
Lecturer on Astronomy
Millimeter-and submillimeter-wave instrumentation.
Thomas M. Dame, Lecturer on Astronomy
Millimeter-wave observations of interstellar molecules, primarily with the 1.2
meter telescope at the Center for Astrophysics. Research on galactic structure,
the interstellar medium, and star formation in the Milky Way and external galaxies.
Rosanne Di Stefano, Lecturer on Astronomy
Interacting binaries; stars and binaries in dense stellar environments; gravitational
lensing..
Daniel Fabricant,
Lecturer on Astronomy
Galaxy clusters; galaxy evolution; large-scale structure; instrumentation for
optical astronomy.
Giovanni Fazio, Lecturer on Astronomy
Infrared astronomy, including balloon-borne, satellite, and ground-based observations
using infrared array cameras; infrared detector development; the early universe;
star formation and evolution; brown dwarfs; and ultraluminous galaxies.
Christine Forman, Lecturer on Astronomy
X-ray observations of hot gas in galaxies and clusters of glaxies to determine
their mass, structure, and cosmological evolution.
Lincoln Jared Greenhill, Lecturer
on Astronomy
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN)--accretion disks, jets, structures a few parsecs
from AGN central engines, megamasers; massive star formation--mass flows <1000
AU from protostars, the Orion BN/KL region, masers; late-type stars--circumstellar
shells and masers; infrared bright Wolf-Rayet stars.
Matthew Holman, Lecturer on Astronomy
Studies of the long-term dynamics of our solar system and extrasolar planetary
systems. Observational surveys for Kuiper belt objects, Centaurs, and outer
planet satellites.
Kate Kirby,
Lecturer on Astronomy
Theoretical calculations of molecular structure and properties; studies of molecular
processes, such as photoionization, photodissociation, autoionization, and dissociative
recombination; studies of molecules and molecular processes in interstellar
clouds.
David Latham,
Lecturer on Astronomy
Searches for extrasolar planets; the formation and early history of the Milky
Way Galaxy; the frequency and orbital characteristics of binaries in various
stellar populations.
Myron Lecar, Lecturer on Astronomy
Gravitational dynamics. Studies of the formation of the terrestrial planets.
Chaotic orbits in the solar system. Cosmology. Studies of dynamics of voids
and the large scale structure in the universe.
Jeffrey McClintock, Lecturer on Astronomy
Observations of X-ray binary systems that contain a black hole primary; measurements
of the mass and spin of stellar-mass blackholes.
Philip M. Sadler, Senior Lecturer
Research in science education including identification of student misconceptions,
development of introductory science courses in astronomy and physics, and testing
of effective teaching methods. Computer simulations for learning introductory
physics. Networked automated observatories for variable star photometry, asteroid
and comet searches, and daytime observation. History of and current developments
in celestial navigation.
Patrick Slane,
Lecturer on Astronomy
Galactic X-ray astronomy; supernova remnants; young neutron stars.
Simon Steel, Lecturer on Astronomy
Star formation, galaxy evolution, optical and infrared spectroscopy, astronomy education
and the public understanding of space science.
David Wilner,
Lecturer on Astronomy Star and planet formation; aperture
synthesis observations and techniques.
Qizhou Zhang,
Lecturer on Astronomy
Molecular cloud and star formation; study of infall motions, disks, and outflows
in star forming regions.
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