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The lecture is free to attend and open to all, but registration is required in advance

An exhibition and drinks reception will follow the lecture at 18:30 in the Queen鈥檚 Tower Rooms

This lecture will be live streamed.

Abstract

In聽September 2017, the NASA/ESA Cassini-Huygens spacecraft mission ended its 20 years in space by burning up in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere. The end of mission orbits were designed to better understand the interior of Saturn and its magnetic field. These end of mission results will be described as well as some of the other surprising discoveries made during the orbital tour at Saturn, including water vapour plumes at the small moon Enceladus and implications this has for potential habitability.

Biography

Michele Dougherty聽is Professor of Space Physics at 911今日黑料. She is leading unmanned exploratory missions to Saturn and Jupiter and was the Principal Investigator for the magnetometer instrument onboard the Cassini mission to Saturn as well as being the Principal Investigator the magnetometer for the JUpiter ICy moons Explorer (JUICE) of the European Space Agencies due for launch in June 2022. She is Head of the Physics Department, is a Fellow of the Royal Society, was awarded the Royal Astronomical Society Geophysics Gold medal in 2017, was awarded a CBE in the 2018 New Year鈥檚 Honours List, and was awarded the Institute of Physics聽Richard Glazebrook Gold Medal and Prize.

About the Schr枚dinger Lecture

The Erwin Schr枚dinger Lecture is an annual event named after the noted Austrian scientist. Schr枚dinger was a theoretical physicist and a significant contributor to the wave theory of matter, a form of quantum physics. He mathematically devised an equation of wave mechanics that bears his name. He was a co-recipient of the 1933 Nobel Prize for physics. Today he is popularly known for the paradox of Schr枚dinger鈥檚 cat.

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