(Machine) Learning the Genealogy of the Milky Way
- Speaker
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Lina Necib, Ph.D.Assistant Professor of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Presidential Lectures are a series of free public colloquia spotlighting groundbreaking research across four themes: neuroscience and autism science, physics, biology, and mathematics and computer science. These curated, high-level scientific talks feature leading scientists and mathematicians and are designed to foster discussion and drive discovery within the New York City research community. We invite those interested in these topics to join us for this weekly lecture series.
Galaxies form and grow by merging with other galaxies, making the formation history of a galaxy resemble that of a family tree. Our galaxy, the Milky Way, is no exception. With recent telescopes like the Gaia space mission, we can finally build the Milky Way’s family tree.
In this Presidential Lecture, Lina Necib will discuss how we can use machine learning techniques to unveil the secrets of the merger history of our galaxy, including clustering techniques that group stars by their original galaxies, neural networks that separate stars with galactic and extragalactic origins, and anomaly detectors that uncover faint signatures of old mergers. Putting all this work together is a step towards building our galaxy’s family tree, she says.