Leaks and bursts

Wednesday 27 Jul 2022 @ 12:00 p.m., Laby Theatre(+Zoom)
Associate Professor Jeff Cooke, Swinburne University; Email: jeffreycooke[at]swin.edu.au

Abstract

In this talk, I will I first discuss work by our group on identifying and studying high-redshift (z ~ 3-5) star forming galaxies with massive stars that are leaking Lyman continuum photons to better understand the sources responsible for reionising the Universe. Secondly, I will present the first observational method to directly measure massive star cloud collapse timescales and progenitor star lifetimes of gamma-ray bursts and superluminous supernovae. These observational efforts include our Hubble Space Telescope and Keck program data, along with other telescope data, and have important implications for, and can directly benefit from, large-scale cosmological simulations, JWST and 30m-class telescopes, and 21 cm mapping of reionisation by the Square Kilometre Array.