10th Annual Sobel Seminar: Peter Hall

Event Date: 

Tuesday, May 7, 2013 - 3:30pm

Event Date Details: 

Light refreshments will be served at 3:15pm

Presented by the Department of Statistics & Applied Probability

Event Location: 

  • ESB 1001 (Engineering Science Building)
  • Annual Sobel Lecture

The 10th Annual Sobel Seminar

In honor of Dr. Milton Sobel

Speaker:

Professor Peter Hall, University of Melbourne and the University of California, Davis

Abstract:

If the intensity of light radiating from a star varies in a periodic fashion over time, then there are significant opportunities for accessing information about the star’s origins, age, and structure. For example, if two stars have a similar periodicity and light curves, and if we can gain information about the structure of one of them (perhaps because it is relatively close to Earth, and therefore amenable to direct observation), then we can make deductions about the structure of the other. Therefore period lengths, and light-curve shapes, are of significant interest. In this talk we shall briefly outline the history and current status of the study of periodic variable stars, and review some of the statistical methods used for their analysis.