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Using Cosmic Explosions to Explore the Universe

Updated: Feb 9

When conducting his research, Professor Nial Tanvir looks further – and further back – than almost anyone else on the planet. As an expert on gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), the most luminous and violent explosions known to science, he has led teams which have found

some of the most distant objects in the universe, providing valuable clues as to what was happening just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. 


In 2013 Professor Tanvir showed that collisions between ultra-dense neutron stars are accompanied by not just a GRB but also a slower kind of explosion called a kilonova. This led in 2017 to his co-discovery of a kilonova created by the first neutron star merger to be detected by its gravitational wave emissions, thus opening up the new field of multi-messenger astronomy.


In 2019 the Royal Astronomical Society awarded him its prestigious Herschel Medal for investigations of outstanding merit in observational astrophysics. 

Alongside his research, Professor Tanvir is very active in the field of public outreach, taking his passion for deep space to schools, colleges and public events, as well as contributing to radio and TV coverage of the subject.


We're all looking forward to welcoming Professor Tanvir and lets not forget that Mark will also be presenting his monthly Sky Notes with a round up of what to expect in the coming months (that's if the clouds eventually give way to some clear skies!). Marks Sky notes can be found here:

February 2024 skynotes
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