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05/12/2013 - 13:30
Stellar water fountains: planetary nebulae in the making
Planetary nebulae (PN) are one of the final phases in the evolution of low and intermediate mass stars (<8 Msun). They display a great variety of shapes, although in their previous phases (Asymptotic giant branch =AGB) they have a spherical geometry. The transition from spherical symmetry to asymmetry must occur during the short post-AGB phase or in the early PN phase. Here we present a special type of evolved stars, called "...
Dr. JFrancisco Gómez
28/11/2013 - 13:30
Galaxy clusters: galaxy laboratories and cosmological probes. A see you later seminar.
In this talk -my last one in the IAA for the moment- I will talk about the largest structures in the Universe: galaxy clusters. The first part of the talk will be focused on galaxy clusters embedded in the large scale structure: how we detect them and how we can use them to provide estimations of cosmological parameters. In the second part, I will talk about the galaxies living in clusters, in particular, about the brightest cluster...
Dr. Begoña Ascaso
27/11/2013 - 10:30
Deconvolución de datos fotométricos SHARDS y IRAC: aplicación al estudio de LAEs a z>5
Los estudios fotométricos en óptico en IR de fuentes débiles son una perfecta alternativa a la espectroscopía, ya que ésta última técnica es ineficiente para este tipo de fuentes. Sin embargo, las imágenes fotométricas pueden poseer bajas resoluciones, tanto espacial como angular. La baja resolución angular puede deberse o bien al seeing atmosférico, en el caso de...
naím Ramírez Olivencia - Sala de Juntas del Nuevo Edificio (IAA-CSIC)
19/11/2013 - 22/11/2013
The Galactic Center Black Hole Laboratory
Granada
12/11/2013 - 14/11/2013
ALHAMBRA in the Alhambra
Granada
07/11/2013 - 13:30
Proposing observations with the European VLBI Network
The European VLBI Network (EVN) is currently the most sensitive VLBI array in the world (its collecting area is about a hundred thousand square meters, or 1/10 of the planned Square Kilometer Array). I will give an overview of the EVN and the kind of science being done with this radio interferometric array, which essentially goes from Solar System studies up to quasars at high redshift. As a member of the EVN Programme Committee, I will...
Dr. Miguel Angel Pérez-Torres
31/10/2013 - 13:30
Digital Science: towards the executable paper
The science performed in Astronomy is digital science. This fact does not prevent the final outcome of an experiment is still difficult to reproduce. 
J. E. Ruiz
30/10/2013 - 10:30
Characterisation of an Isolated Galaxy Sample: Astrophysical Implications
In order to understand the evolution of galaxies, it is necessary to have a reference sample where the effects of the environment are minimised and quantified. Recent advances in large redshift galaxy surveys, such as the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), allow to reach a 3-dimensional picture of the environment. In the first two parts of this talk, I will present a revision of the isolation degree and a study of the 3-dimensional...
Mamen Argudo Fernández - Sala de Juntas del Nuevo Edificio (IAA-CSIC)
24/10/2013 - 14:30
AGN feedback and accretion in Perseus A
The Perseus Cluster is known as a famous observational example of (radio-mode) AGN feedback driven by the radio jet of the central galaxy Perseus A (NGC 1275, 3C 84). The feedback process is evident from observations of the intra-cluster medium showing X-ray bubbles filled with radio plasma. The radio jet generating these bubbles is powered by accretion onto the supermassive black hole in Perseus A. In this talk, I will present our results...
Dr. Julia Scharwächter
17/10/2013 - 14:30
The Martian ionosphere
The ionospheres of the planets (those regions with a significant fraction of free electrons and ions) provide interesting clues about the interaction of the solar radiation and the solar energetic particles with the planetary atmospheres.They can also be used to gain information about the density and temperature of the neutral upper atmospheres, a region that in the Martian case has traditionally eluded observation. In this talk I will sketch...
Dr. Francisco González Galindo
10/10/2013 - 14:30
Hot potatoes: the compact obscured nuclei of dusty IR galaxies
Evidence is now mounting that most of the activity in some luminous infrared galaxies takes place in their compact obscured nuclei (CONs), regions of less than 100~pc in diameter, which harbor large amounts of warm (T$>$100~K) molecular material (N(H$_2$)$>10^{24}$~cm$^{-2}$). The combined effect of warm, shielded gas and intense infrared radiation produce rich molecular spectra, which make these objects unique laboratories to study...
Dr. Francesco Costagliola
07/10/2013 - 11/10/2013
Third Workshop on Robotic Autonomous Observatories
Málaga
03/10/2013 - 14:30
Spectroscopy of the short GRB 130603B: The host galaxy and environment of a compact object merger
The nature of short duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) remains a central problem of modern astrophysics. They are thought to be related to the violent merger of compact objects, such as neutron stars or black holes, which would make them promising sources of gravitational waves. The absence of supernovae signatures clearly indicates that SGRB progenitors differ from their long duration cousins, but constraints to-date arise almost entirely from...
Dr. Antonio de Ugarte Postigo
26/09/2013 - 14:30
Main-Belt Comets
Since the discovery of 133P/Elst-Pizarro in 1996, an object moving in a typical Main Asteroid Belt orbit, but displaying a comet-like tail, nine more of those objects have been identified. They constitute a new class of small Solar System bodies, the ``missing link'' between asteroids and comets. Three of those objects fall into the ``disrupted asteroids'' subgroup, where the activity is suspected to be driven by either a...
Dr. Fernando Moreno
23/09/2013 - 27/09/2013
Galaxies meet GRBs at Cabo de Gata
Granada
12/09/2013 - 14:30
Cosmological Simulations of Galaxy Formation
We present a suite of simulated galaxies, that match a wide range of scaling relations over a large mass range at z=0, and follow the evolution of these relations and confront them with observational constraints. We then make connections to "galactic archaeology" by examining the nature of the major structural components of the discs, highlighting that far and near field cosmology can be combined using these types of simulations. We...
Dr. Chris Brook
05/09/2013 - 14:30
SN 1993J and M81: a fruitful astrophysical collaboration
SN1993J, a powerful radio supernova high in the northern sky, has been monitored with VLBI though its lifetime. The VLBI observations have been phase-referenced to the core of M81. We will highlight the main results obtained: its extremely circular shell-like radio structure has expanded over 15 years in a rather self-similar way; the expansion is wavelength dependent, a result which can be mainly explained by a combination of a varying free-...
Prof. A. Alberdi
18/07/2013 - 14:30
Can we solve by solar magneto-seismology one of astrophysics great problems: Coronal heating enigma?
The latest satellite and ground-based observations have provided us a wealth of evidence of waves and oscillations present in the solar atmosphere from the low photosphere to the upper corona. Our understanding of the magnetically dominated structures and their dynamics in the solar atmosphere has been considerably enhanced in light of the latest high spatial and temporal resolution observations (e.g. DST/ROSA, IBIS, CoMP, SST/CRISP; SOHO,...
Prof. Robertus von Fay-Siebenberg
15/07/2013
Granada hosts a high level international scientific summit on low-temperature plasma
The International Conference on Phenomena in Ionized Gases (ICPIG) is bringing together over five hundred researchers in Granada this week  
04/07/2013 - 14:30
The ALHAMBRA survey: First Data Release.
The ALHAMBRA (Advance Large Homogeneous Area Medium Band Redshift Astronomical; Moles et al. 2008) survey has observed 8 different regions of the sky, including sections of the COSMOS, DEEP2, ELAIS, GOODS-N, SDSS and Groth fields using a new photometric system with 20 contiguous, ~300A width, filters covering the optical range, plus deep JHKs imaging. The observations, carried out with the Calar Alto 3.5m telescope using the wide field...
Alberto Molino
27/06/2013 - 14:30
CALIFA
tbd
Dr. Sebastián Sánchez
20/06/2013 - 14:30
El Universo de Planck
Recientemente se han presentado los resultados cosmológicos de la misión espacial Planck. Es un buen momento para poner al día el valor de los parámetros del Universo. La nueva composición se resume en 26.8% materia oscura, 4.9% materia visible, 68.3% energía oscura. El valor de la constante de Hubble ha resultado también muy inferior a lo esperado: 67.5 km/(s Mpc). La conclusión m...
Prof. E. Battaner
13/06/2013 - 14:30
Love for Science or 'Academic Prostitution'?
Note: This is a seminar given at the European Research Council Headquarter some weeks ago. It was focused on the expected audience, members of the ERC directly involved in setting the rules for Grants evaluation and/or participate in all steps of the process, mainly Scientific Officers, but also Agency staff. I have decided to present the talk as it was presented there. Abstract: In a recent Special issue of Nature concerning Science...
Dr. Lourdes Verdes-Montenegro
06/06/2013 - 14:30
PAH's in Titan's Upper Atmosphere
Observations of Titan's atmosphere made with the VIMS instrument on board the Cassini satellite show a strong limb emission around 3.3 µm at high atmospheric altitudes (above 700 km). This emission exhibits the typical spectral signatures of the strong CH4 bands. A detailed analysis of the spectra reveals, however, an additional strong emission centered at 3.28 µm and peaking at about 950 km. We have untangled this spectral...
Prof. Manuel López-Puertas
26/05/2013 - 15:00
Estudio multi-frecuencia de las historias de formación estelar espacialmente resueltas de galaxias en el cartografiado de campo integral CALIFA.
¿Por que estudiar las poblaciones estelares? Los diferentes procesos evolutivos dejan un registro fósil diferente en las propiedades de población estelar de las galaxias. Un metodo muy potente que permite estudiar la formación y evolución de las galaxias consiste en reconstruir la historia de formación estelar a través de las propiedades de las estrellas que las forman. Actualmente se utiliza la técnica de síntesis evolutiva para inferir las...
Rafael López Fernández - Otra
23/05/2013 - 14:30
Extreme emission-line galaxies: New light on the mass assembly and chemical enrichment of low-mass galaxies
Galaxies showing early and significant stages of mass assembling are key objects for understanding galaxy evolution. However, young starbursts like these are extremely rare in the local Universe. In this context, a unique population of compact, low-mass galaxies forming stars at unusually high rates - also known as the "green peas" - emerge now as ideal laboratories to study the details of massive star formation, feedback and...
Dr. R. Amorin
16/05/2013 - 14:30
Hall motions and star escape in galactic dynamics in the Hill approach
The motion of a galactic cluster is approximately described by those equations in a co-moving frame, introduced by Hill in the XIXth century. Individual motions can only studied numerically, but  for the center of mass interstellar gravitational forces drop out and one is left with a simply system analogous to those considered by Hall for a planar electron in crossed electric and magnetic fields. In both cases, the motion of the COM is...
Dr. P. Horvathy
09/05/2013 - 14:30
The IAA COsmic DUst LABoratory, a lab next door (building).
MAIN GOALS of this talk: 1. Let you know/remind you that the IAA has a worldwide reference light scattering laboratory for experimentally studying the angular dependence of the scattering matrices of dust samples of astrophysical interest. 2. Convince the audience of: - Polarization is highly valuable tool for retrieving information on the physical properties of small cosmic dust particles. - How useful laboratory measurements...
Dr. O. Muñoz
25/04/2013 - 14:30
X-raying born-again planetary nebulae
Planetary nebulae have been a addition to the zoo of X-ray-emitting sources. Here I present results on a the very particular class of born-again planetary nebulae, those whose central star has experienced a helium shell flash during the lifetime of the planetary nebula. The interaction of the fast stellar wind of the central star with hydrogen-poor material ejected during the born-again episode provides a unique case to study...
Dr. M. Guerrero
22/04/2013 - 26/04/2013
HOPS Spring Meeting
Granada
18/04/2013 - 14:30
The Shortest-Known–Period Star Orbiting Our Galaxy’s Supermassive Black Hole
Stars with short orbital periods  at the centre of our Galaxy offer a powerful and unique probe of the nearest supermassive black hole. Observing these stars is a long-term astrophysical experiment that has been going on for two decades. In this talk I will outline this project and discuss the observational challenges and the strategies to overcome them. Steady technological and methodological advances allow us to improve...
Dr. Rainer Schoedel
17/04/2013 - 15:00
A strong recollimation shock far from the core of the radiogalaxy 3C120
Which could be the mechanism for the production of moving and stationary components in AGN jets? How is it possible that a stationary component appears to be composed by subcomponents moving at superluminal speeds? The AGNs are a special class of galaxies that show an unusual amount of emission. The responsible of this emission is a supermassive black hole () that accretes matter from a hot rotating disk, leading to the formation of ultra...
Carolina Casadio - Otra
11/04/2013 - 14:30
CALIFA: The spatially resolved Star Formation History of Galaxies
The Calar Alto Legacy Integral Field Area (CALIFA) is an ongoing 3D spectroscopic survey of 600 nearby galaxies of all kinds. This pioneer survey is providing valuable clues on how galaxies form and evolve. Processed through spectral synthesis techniques, CALIFA datacubes allow us to, for the first time, spatially resolve the star formation history of galaxies spread across the color-magnitude diagram. The richness of this approach is already...
Dr. R. González Delgado
04/04/2013 - 14:30
Probing Galaxy-Scale Halos and Large-Scale Structure with Weak Gravitational Lensing
The presence of dark matter in the Universe is well-established and contributes significantly to structures ranging from galaxies to superclusters. However, the details of the connection between luminous galaxies and the dark matter halos in which they reside are not particularly well-characterised. Weak gravitational lensing is the only direct probe that can measure the total mass profile associated with galaxies over a wide range of radii...
Dr. Ami Choi
21/03/2013 - 13:30
The Javalambre-PAU Astrophysical Survey
  The Javalambre-PAU Astrophysical Survey (J-PAS) is a very wide field Cosmological Survey to be carried out from the Javalambre Observatory in Spain with a purpose-built, dedicated 2.5m telescope, using a set of 54 narrow band and 5 broad band filters over a 1.3Gpix, 5deg2 FOV camera. Starting in early 2015,  J-PAS will image 8500deg2 of Northern Sky and obtain 0.003(1 + z) precision photometric...
Dr. N. Benitez
19/03/2013 - 16:00
Martian dust (analogs) in Scattering Laboratory
Laboratory in Institute of Astrophysics? Doesn´t it sound a bit strange? What can be measured there? How can it be applied in Astrophysics? During my CCD talk I would like to respond those and another questions. Firstly, I will make a breve introduction into The Scattering Laboratory called as well Cosmic Dust Laboratory ubicated in UDIT. And then I will talk you about the subject I work on- The Scattering on Martian Dust Analogs. Dust...
Dominika Dabrowska - Otra
14/03/2013 - 13:30
Towards a general classification of atmospheric waves on Venus
The atmospheric superrotation of Venus goes on being a puzzling phenomenon in the Solar system and is still considered an open problem in geophysicalfluid dynamics. A general agreement exists among numerous works concerning the main role that atmospheric waves should have in the generation and maintenance of the superrotation, although most of them try to study the impact of the waves with complex GCMs or using adapted terrestrial dispersion...
Dr. Javier Peralta Calvillo
06/03/2013 - 13:30
Hot Intergalactic Gas in Clusters of Galaxies
Clusters of galaxies are the most massive objects in our Universe. Each of them contains dark matter, thousands of galaxies and is filled with hot intergalactic gas radiating in X-rays. Unusual method to detect clusters of galaxies is possible due to presence of extremely isotropic Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMB) filling our Universe. Interaction of hot electrons with CMB photons changes the CMB spectrum in the...
Prof. Rashid Sunyaev
27/02/2013 - 16:00
¿Por qué estos !!! de GRBs me interrumpen las observaciones?
¿Quién no ha estado tranquilo y feliz en un observatorio y de repente alguien llama por teléfono solicitando una observación urgente de una contrapartida óptica de un GRB? Correcto, a mí me pasó en unas prácticas de la universidad... y no por ello les odié... más bien atrajeron mi curiosidad y... finalmente, a mi. En esta charla daré una pequeña introducción a las características observacionales de los GRBs y sus afterglows, así como de sus...
Rubén Sánchez - Otra
27/02/2013 - 13:30
Mysteries and Discoveries from the Chandra Planetary Nebulae Suvery (ChanPlaNS)
Chandra observations of planetary nebulae (PNe) have ushered in a new wave of discoveries and mysteries in this class of evolved stars. The X-ray emission from PNe comes in two flavors: compact sources in the vicinity of the central star and extended sources that fill the nebular cavities generated during the PN formation process. The latter variety, called hot bubbles, are chemically-enriched with helium shell burning products (C, O, and Ne...
Dr. Rodolfo Montez
21/02/2013 - 13:30
Local tadpole galaxies and cold-flows
Extremely metal poor galaxies are primitive objects attending to their chemical evolution. For reasons not well understood, they tend to have cometary or 'tadpole' morphology, with a bright peripheral clump ('the head') on a faint tail. Tadpole galaxies are rare in the nearby universe but turn out to be very common at high redshift, where they are usually interpreted as disk galaxies in early stages of assembling. If this...
Dr. Jorge Sánchez Almeida
14/02/2013 - 13:30
Our Central Organization: Structure and Duties
More than 130 research centres and institutes, the IAA among them, belong to the Spanish Research Council (CSIC). The management of the Council is carried out by the Central Organization, in Madrid. With this talk I want to give an overview of the structure of our Central Organization and of the duties of its members.
Matilde Fernández Hernández
07/02/2013 - 13:30
Bajo un mismo cielo
"Bajo un mismo cielo” (“Under the same sky”) tells the story of the trip undertaken in 2009 by GalileoMobile. In a road trip that lasted two months and traveled around seven thousand kilometers, GalileoMobile visited schools and communities in Chile, Bolivia, and Peru to perform science activities and organize astronomical observations. Through children's eyes, an encounter from different visions and...
William Schoenell
31/01/2013 - 13:30
IAA: its Structure, Failures and Potential
In this talk I will first show the structure of our Institute, the task division and the people responsible for these taks. I will also analyse all the procedures, customs and usages that drift us apart from the dream IAA. Finally, I will make some remarks about the (underestimated? disregarded?) potential of our Institute.
Matilde Fernández Hernández
24/01/2013 - 13:30
Magnetic Effects and ovsersized M Dwarfs in the Young Open Cluster NGC 2516
By combining rotation periods with spectroscopic determinations of projected rotation velocity, Jackson, Jeffries & Maxted (2009) have found that the mean radii for low-mass M-dwarfs in the young, open cluster NGC 2516 are larger than model predictions at a given absolute I magnitude or I - K color and also larger than measured radii of magnetically inactive M-dwarfs. The relative radius difference is correlated with magnitude, increasing...
James MacDonald
17/01/2013 - 13:30
Results from a stellar occultation by the dwarf planet Makemake
Pluto and Eris are icy dwarf planets with nearly identical accurately measured sizes, comparable densities, and similar surface compositions. Their different albedos and current distances from the Sun are likely reasons why Pluto possesses an atmosphere whereas Eris does not. Makemake, another icy dwarf planet with a similar spectrum to Eris and Pluto is currently at intermediate distance to the Sun between the two. Makemake’s size and...
José Luis Ortiz
13/12/2012 - 18:00
The P91 ESO OPC Meeting - What Matters in an ESO Proposal
I will give a brief summary of information obtained during my participation in the 91st meeting of the ESO Observing Programmes Committee, including the current and future availability of ESO instruments and telescopes and pending changes in ESO instrumentation. I will also briefly explain the proposal evaluation procedure and give you some tipps on how to write proposals for ESO time.
Rainer Schoedel
29/11/2012 - 13:30
Searches for young stars in the central region of our Galaxy
Star formation processes at the Galactic Center (GC) could differ significantly from the rest of the Milky Way because of factors like the high pressure and turbulence of the ISM, strong magnetic fields, and the presence of the supermassive black hole (SMBH). Understanding star formation in this region is interesting not only in it own right, but also as a  template for other galactic nuclei. Here I present results of three different...
Shogo Nishiyama
28/11/2012 - 16:00
What is going on in comets?!
Os hablaré del apasionante mundo de la investigación cometaria. ¿Qué son?,¿de dónde vienen?, ¿son realmente peligrosos?, ¿Por qué estudiarlos?, ¿qué información pueden aportar?, ¿qué hace nuestro grupo y por qué?
Fran Pozuelos - Otra Sala de reuniones NE
31/10/2012 - 16:00
Properties and evolution of internetwork magnetic fields inside supergranular cells
To understand the formation of small-scale magnetic fields in the quiet Sun and their contribution to the solar activity, it is essential to investigate the properties and evolution of internetwork magnetic fields. Using Hinode/NFI line-of-sight magnetograms of very high sensitivity (6 Mx/cm^{2}), spatial resolution (0.16 arcsec/pixel), and cadence (90 s), we follow the evolution of magnetic elements inside of a supergranular cell located at...
Milan Gosic - Sala de Reuniones del Nuevo Edificio (IAA-CSIC)
26/10/2012 - 14:00
QSO outflows
The study of AGN feedback processes on the evolution of their host galaxies and their environments is a field of growing importance in the past years. One of the feedback mechanisms identified is high-velocity outflows in QSOs. In this talk, some results are presented based on observations of several QSOs, aimed to determine the importance of these outflows as feedback mechanisms.
J.Ignacio González Serrano
18/10/2012 - 14:30
Cosmological Challenges of Dwarf Galaxies
A prime challenge to our understanding of galaxy formation concerns the scarcity of dwarf galaxies compared with the numerous low-mass halos expected in the current ΛCDM paradigm. This is usually accounted for by assuming that energetic feedback from evolving stars confines dwarf galaxy formation to relatively massive halos spanning a narrow mass range. I will highlight a number of observations that may be used to test this assumption...
Julio Navarro
04/10/2012 - 14:30
Hydrodynamical Models of Core-Collapse Supernovae
A set of hydrodynamical models applied to stellar evolutionary progenitors is used to study the nature of core-collapse supernovae (SNe).  For the type IIb SN 2011dh, our modeling suggests that a large progenitor star---with R ~200 R_sol--- is needed to reproduce the early light curves. This is consistent with the suggestion that a yellow super-giant star detected at the location of the SN in deep pre-explosion images is the progenitor...
Melina Bersten
27/09/2012 - 14:30
ASTRONET, a comprehensive long-term planning for the development of European astronomy
ASTRONET was created by a group of European funding agencies, including the Spanish ministry, in order to establish a strategic planning mechanism for all of European astronomy. It covers the whole astronomical domain, from the Sun and Solar System to the limits of the observable Universe, and from radioastronomy to gamma-rays and particles, on the ground as well as in space. ASTRONET aims to engage all astronomical communities...
Jesús Gallego
26/09/2012 - 15:00
Ciencia digital transparente: más allá de la automatización
La ciencia que se realiza en Astronomía es ciencia digital: cada uno de los elementos y acciones que intervienen en la producción científica podría registrarse en soporte electrónico. Este hecho no impide que el resultado final de un experimento sea aún difícil de reproducir, incluso para el propio autor. La reproducibilidad es uno de los pilares del método científico. En esta charla describiré el trabajo que estamos realizando en el grupo AMIGA...
José Enrique Ruiz - Sala de Reuniones del Nuevo Edificio (IAA-CSIC)
19/07/2012 - 14:00
A deeper look on thick discs using data from the Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies (S4G)
Thick discs are disc-like components with a scale height larger than that of the classical discs. They are  most easily detected in close to edge-on galaxies in which they appear as a roughly exponential excess of light which appears a few thin disc scale heights above the midplane. Their origin has been considered mysterious until recently and several formation theories have been proposed. Unveiling the origin of thick discs is...
Sébastien Comerón
13/07/2012 - 14:00
Jets de Estrellas Jóvenes: Teoría
En los últimos años ha habido un gran esfuerzo en la construcción de modelos teóricos que nos permitan entender y explicar distintos aspectos de los jets producidos por estrellas en su vida temprana. Algunos de estos aspectos son: su mecanismo de producción y colimación, la generación de nudos en su interior y la interacción con el medio circundante. En este trabajo se...
Jorge Cantó
05/07/2012 - 14:00
Infraestructuras de cálculo en el Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA): pasado, presente y futuro.
Actualmente el IAA dispone de una gran infraestructura de cálculo, la conocida Sala Grid, que alberga 32 nodos IBM x3950M2 con un total de 128 procesadores Intel Xeon Quad Core 2.93GHz (512 cores), 4 TeraBytes de memoria RAM, y una capacidad de almacenamiento total de 315 TeraBytes, todo ello interconectado con tecnología de red Infiniband a 20Gbps. Hasta ahora esta infraestructura se ha utilizado dentro del marco del...
José Ramón Rodón
21/06/2012 - 14:00
The AGN-Starburst connection in nearby (U)LIRGs: a radio view
I review the main results obtained by our team in the last few years, on studies of nearby Luminous and Ultra-Luminous Infrared Galaxies (LIRGs and ULIRGs, respectively). These galaxies are expected to form stars at rates as large as (10-100) Msolar/yr, or even higher, and constitute excellent laboratories for studies of star-formation. They are also expected to be bright at radio wavelengths.  Among other results, I will present...
Miguel Ángel Pérez Torres
17/06/2012 - 22/06/2012
TEA-IS Summer School
Málaga
14/06/2012 - 14:00
Holographic imaging of dense fields: the amazing poor man's MCAO
Being able to image large fields at the diffraction limit of large telescopes is one of Astronomy's  oldest dreams. The standard way toward achieving this goal is to throw lots of money at it and build ever more sophisticated adaptive optics (AO) systems. As an alternative way, I present an algorithm for speckle holography that has been optimised for diffraction limited imaging of crowded fields.  I will present the exciting...
Rainer Schoedel
31/05/2012 - 14:00
NITROGEN-TO-OXYGEN RATIO AS A SOLID TOOL TO ASCERTAIN THE CHEMICAL EVOLUTION OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES
Nitrogen is one of the most abundant metals in the ISM and thus emitting strong emission-lines in the optical spectrum of ionized gaseous nebulae. Its nucleosynthetic origin is quite different to that of oxygen as it is produced both by massive stars and by intermediate- and low-mass stars. Thus, the study of the nitrogen-to -oxygen ratio by means of especially defined strong-line methods offers a powerful tool to inspect with...
Enrique Pérez Montero
26/05/2012 - 15:00
Testeado de Posicionadores de Fibras Ópticas y Desarrollo de Interfaz de Comunicación para Instrumentos de Próxima Generación
El Robot comercial de montaje Kawasaki, se baraja como posible brazo posicionador de fibras ópticas para del instrumento OPTIMOS-EVE (E-ELT). La Universidad de Oxford forma parte del consorcio de los espectrógrafos OPTIMOS-EVE y WEAVE (WHT, ambos con elementos retractores de fibras de similar diseño. Como parte de mi proyector fin de máster establecí las bases técnicas para la realización de las...
Zaira Modroño Berdiñas - Sala de Juntas del Nuevo Edificio (IAA-CSIC)
24/05/2012 - 14:00
Development of a miniaturized real time attitude controller for micro and nanosatellites
In last years low cost space missions have become an instrument for many research institutes to test new technologies and perform low-orbit Earth science using commercial components. Cubesat represent the most popular standard for microsatellites, but due to low cost components and reduced size, there are no complete attitude controllers available for the smallest versions. This talk will describe the development of a control system...
Gian Paolo Candini
18/05/2012
PIIISA 2012 - Young people and Science
The PIIISA 2012 project ended yesterday. A project that aims to join high school students with the professional investigators.  
17/05/2012 - 14:00
Ice Rocks in the Solar System
The study of the minor bodies in the Solar System has historically been a major source of information. The term "Minor Body" covers objects exhibiting very different dynamical and compositional characteristics, in fact, every object in the Solar System that is not a planet or a star, is a minor body. All these objects share a common link, they were the building blocks of the Solar System that we observe today and are considered to...
Noemi Pinilla Alonso
10/05/2012 - 14:00
The thirteen billion year history of the most massive black holes
Super-massive black holes (BHs) that are found in the centers of most galaxies started their growth when the universe was about 300 million years old. Some of these "seed black holes" were probably the remnants of the earliest stars. The largest BHs, that are some 10^10 times more massive than the sun, accumulated most of their mass during the first 3 billion years after the big bang. The less massive ones are still growing today. I...
Hagai Netzer
03/05/2012 - 13:00
Detecting substructure in the galactic stellar halo with Gaia
We present a Gaia mock catalogue we have created to test various approaches to detect the presence of past mergers in the Galactic halo. We propose an extension of the great circle cell method of Johnston et al. (1996), which is optimized to identify tidal debris along great circles in the sky. We have added the proper motion information that will be supplied by Gaia to add a kinematical restriction to the original method. We test our...
Luis A. Aguilar
26/04/2012 - 14:00
The Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Camera 3
The Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) was installed in 2009 and is now the primary science instrument on HST. Under development since 1998, WFC3 expanded Hubble's ultraviolet and infrared imaging capabilities by factors of more than 20. WFC3 also provides an unparalleled capability for low resolution infrared spectroscopy of very faint sources. This talk will discuss the scientific goals for WFC3, its basic design and technological...
John Mackenty
25/04/2012 - 15:00
The Virtual Observatory: The e-Science Environment for Discovery & Collaboration in Astrophysics
La astronomía nace cuando el hombre comienza a registrar en diversos medios (tablillas de piedra, papiros, dibujos, fotografías, y recientemente en forma digital) lo que observa en el cielo. En esta charla veremos cómo la cantidad de información accesible a los astrónomos está creciendo de forma exponencial, mientras que su capacidad de procesamiento se está estancando, y que la solución...
Juande Santander Vela - Sala de Juntas del Nuevo Edificio (IAA-CSIC)
18/04/2012
Over a hundred researchers meet in Granada to discuss the future of the study of galaxies
The workshop, taking place from today until Friday,will delve into a technique that is proving in the study of galaxy evolution,integral field spectroscopy.  
12/04/2012 - 14:00
Oxygen in the Universe: a historic introduction
We briefly review the main steps that led to the discovery of oxygen in the Universe and to the understanding of its  production and cosmic evolution. We highlight some of the problems that still need an explanation.
Grażyna Stasińska
28/03/2012 - 15:00
Jet wobbling en jets relativistas: el caso del blázar NRAO150
Los jets están presentes en numerosos escenarios astrofísicos. En particular los jets en galaxias con núcleos activos (AGN) son de las fuentes de radiación mas intensas del universo y presentan estructuras observables a longitud de onda de radio que van desde unos pocos parsec a cientos de Kpc. En los últimos años se ha observado en un mayor número de blázares un cambio en la direcci...
Sol Natalia Molina - Sala de Juntas del Nuevo Edificio (IAA-CSIC)
28/03/2012 - 14:00
A new golden age in Spanish Astronomy: the GTC
Spanish Astronomy  has experienced a great development during the last 20-30 years, which can be, in part, associated to the available technological resources.  Extragalactic astronomy  started in Spain due to the agreement  for the development of the Observatory of the Roque de los Muchachos, with the installation of the INT 2.5m and WHT 4.2m telescopes and their associated instrumentation.  Of course the CAHA...
Josefa Masegosa
15/03/2012 - 13:00
What can we learn from gamma-ray anisotropies?
Over the last two decades the study of angular anisotropies provided a huge amount of information, when used to analyze the Cosmic Microwave Radiation. The same approach can be extended also to higher energies, studying angular fluctuations in the gamma-ray emission. In this talk I will refer in particular to the data of the Fermi-LAT telescope that has recently presented its measurement of the angular power spectrum (APS) of anisotropies at...
Mattia Fornasa
05/03/2012 - 16:00
LINERs, ¿Son también AGNs?
Los LINERs (Low Ionization Narrow Emission-line Regions) representan la población más abundante de los AGNs en el Universo local. Se trata de AGNs de baja luminosidad, que podrían resultar ser el nexo de unión entre las galaxias normales y las activas. Haremos un recorrido por las características que muestran los LINERs, tratando de introducirlos en el modelo unificado de AGNs.
Lorena Hernández García - Sala de Juntas del Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC)
05/03/2012 - 13:00
MIRADAS: The Next-Generation Infrared Spectrograph for the GTC
MIRADAS is a near-infrared multi-object R=20,000 echelle spectrograph for the 10.4-meter Gran Telescopio Canarias. It is the most powerful astronomical instrument of its kind ever envisioned, with an observing efficiency more than an order of magnitude greater than current capabilities for 10-meter-class telescopes. The (still-growing) MIRADAS science team includes more than 40 scientists from 8 institutions in the GTC community. In this talk...
Stephen Eikenberry
23/02/2012 - 13:00
Seeking and Mocking Non-thermal Emission in Galaxy Clusters
Diffuse synchrotron radio emission is observed in many clusters of galaxies probing the presence of high energy cosmic ray (CR) electrons. This emission can be explained by the hadronic model where the electron population originates from the interactions between CR protons and the cluster ambient gas. Additionally, a very high energy gamma-ray emission is also expected. I will briefly review the current knowledge on the non-thermal emission...
Fabio Zandanel
20/02/2012
HEXA: the future of sky mapping
Today begins a meeting about HEXA, a project for a new 6,5 meter telescope to be located at Calar Alto Observatory (Almería)  
16/02/2012 - 13:00
Modelos teóricos de las nebulosas de Eta Carinae
En esta plática se presentan modelos teóricos de los eventos eruptivos de 1840 (la gran erupción) y de 1890 (la menor erupción) de la estrella masiva Eta Car. Las nebulosas bipolares en torno a la estrella se formaron de la interacción del material eyectado durante estas erupciones con el viento estándar de la estrella. En nuestros modelos, se supone un escenario de colisión de...
Ricardo Francisco González Domínguez
09/02/2012 - 16:00
Supernovas. Dónde, cuándo y por qué
Las explosiones de supernova se encuentran entre los fenómenos más violentos del Universo y la enorme energía que se libera en ellas hace que podamos observarlas a grandes distancias. Estudiando el lugar y la velocidad a la que se producen, podemos obtener información física fundamental de las galaxias en las que ocurren. En concreto, veremos cómo la distribución radial de supernovas a lo largo...
Rubén Herrero Illana - Sala de Juntas del Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC)
02/02/2012 - 13:00
Efectos de los cúmulos ionizantes de baja masa en el espectro de regiones HII y galaxias
En este seminario presentaré mi trabajo de tesis sobre el modelado del espectro de líneas de emisión de regiones H II y galaxias con formación estelar. Primero hablaré sobre la influencia de los efectos de muestreo de la función inicial de masas estelares (IMF)  en el continuo ionizante de los cúmulos y en el espectro de regiones H II,  centrando la atención en los cú...
Marcos Villaverde
26/01/2012 - 13:00
Maser emission in evolved stars: from AGB to PNe
I will present a review of maser emission in evolved stars from the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) to planetary nebulae (PNe). The circumstellar envelopes of oxygen-rich evolved stars provide optimal conditions to pump different species of masers, emitting at radio wavelengths. Interferometric observations of masers are a powerful tool to study with the highest angular resolution the molecular gas around evolved stars, because...
Lucero Uscanga Aguilera
19/01/2012 - 13:00
Dwarf galaxies as dark matter laboratories
Dwarf spheroidal galaxies are key objects in the current cosmological paradigm: first, they are the least luminous galaxies, likely signaling the minimum halo mass at which gas can be accreted and converted into stars. Second, they all have ancient stellar populations, providing clues on star formation/feedback processes at early stages of the Universe. Third, they are the most numerous satellites about the Milky Way and M31,...
Jorge Peñarrubia
17/01/2012 - 13:30
Albedo and atmospheric constraints of dwarf planet Makemake from a stellar occultation
Makemake is an icy dwarf planet with a spectrum similar to Eris and Pluto, and is currently at a distance to the Sun intermediate between the two. Although Makemake’s size (1,420 ± 60 km) and albedo are roughly known, there has been no constraint on its density and there were expectations that it could have a Pluto-like atmosphere. Here we report the results from a stellar occultation by Makemake on 2011...
José Luis Ortiz
12/01/2012 - 13:00
Everything you always wanted to know about extinction but were afraid to ask
Twenty two years ago Cardelli et al. published their seminal paper on Galactic extinction laws. In the first part of my talk I will explore that (often quoted but also often misunderstood) paper and detail its strengths and weaknesses. In the second part I will describe the two datasets that have finally allowed the Cardelli et al. laws to be tested to their limit and I will present a new family of extinction laws derived from the new data...
Jesús Maíz Apellániz
11/01/2012 - 16:00
Profundidad de falla y flujo térmico en Mercurio
Los escarpes lobulados son las estructuras tectónicas más relevantes existentes en Mercurio. Su morfología y la deformación producida en su intersección con otras estructuras indican que los escarpes constituyen la expresión en superficie de fallas inversas formadas, principalmente, por el enfriamiento y contracción del planeta. A partir de la geometría de estas fallas podemos obtener...
Mª Isabel Egea González - Sala de Juntas del Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC)
10/01/2012 - 13:30
IAA: its structure, failures, and potential
 In this talk I will first show the structure of our Institute, the task division and the people responsible for these taks. I will also analyse all the procedures, customs and usages that drift us apart from the dream IAA. Finally, I will make some remarks about the (underestimated? disregarded?) potential of our Institute.
Matilde Fernández Hernández
22/12/2011 - 12:34
Dynamical Modeling of Luminous Infrared Galaxy Mergers
It is widely accepted that galaxy mergers can have a significant effect on galaxy properties and may be an important part of galaxy evolution. Enhanced star formation is one frequently observed property of (gas rich) mergers and theoretical prescriptions for star formation can generally reproduce the observed behavior. However a detailed study comparison of these prescriptions with individual galaxy merger events has not been...
George C. Privon
15/12/2011 - 13:00
X-ray properties of nearby luminous infrared galaxies
I present results of X-ray observations of a complete sample of luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) from the GOALS, a multi-wavelength project to study the most luminous IR-selected galaxies in the local Universe. X-ray imaging at an arc-second resolution obtained with the Chandra X-ray Observatory provides locations of an active nucleus, if present, and extended morphology of starburst-driven winds in those LIRGs. An inspection of their X-ray...
Kazushi Iwasawa
01/12/2011 - 13:00
Mass, metallicity and SFR relationships in star forming galaxies using deep surveys
To understand the formation and evolution of galaxies, it is important to have a full comprehension of the role played by Metallicity, Star Formation Rate (SFR), and stellar mass of galaxies. The interplay of these parameters at different redshifts will substantially affect the evolution of galaxies and, as a consequence, the evolution of these parameters provides important constraints for the galaxy evolution models. We studied the...
Maritza A. Lara-Lopez
24/11/2011 - 13:00
The Bayesian Galaxy Cluster Finder and its Application to Large Surveys
One of the main purposes of Large Surveys is the study of galaxy clusters. However, it is not an easy task to compile a complete sample. In this talk, I will present a new technique for detecting galaxy clusters called the Bayesian Cluster Finder (BCF) which is able to determine the position, redshift and richness of clusters in any survey. I will introduce the simulations that we performed to test the algorithm through realistic mock galaxy...
Begoña Ascaso
23/11/2011 - 16:00
Vientos Estelares en Estrellas Masivas
En esta charla se dará una perspectiva general sobre los vientos en estrellas masivas. En particular se pretende explicar la emisión de rayos X alrededor de estrellas masivas evolucionadas.
Jesús Alberto Toalá - Sala de Juntas del Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC)
17/11/2011 - 13:00
Revealing the hidden supernova population in luminous infrared galaxies
A substantial fraction of star formation (SF) and hence of the core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) in the Universe is hidden behind dust. At higher-z obscured star formation in luminous and ultraluminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs and ULIRGs) actually dominates over SF seen in the UV and optical. These same objects are expected to hide in their nuclear regions large numbers of undetected CCSNe. In this talk I describe our ongoing efforts using...
Seppo Mattila
07/11/2011
Science Week at IAA
Fifht edition of Noches de Ciencia, a series of conferences for the Science Week  
03/11/2011 - 13:00
Gamma-Ray-Bursts, High-Energy-Cosmic-Rays and Beam-Plasma Instabilities
Gamma-Ray-Bursts and High-Energy-Cosmic-Rays are two of the most intriguing enigmas of astrophysics. A promising scenario solving both problems consists in the Fermi-like acceleration of particles by relativistic collisionless shocks. These shocks could generate the Gamma Burst together with some highly energetic cosmic rays, in the earlier phase of a Supernovae explosion. Later on, the  Supernovae Remnant could still accelerate cosmic...
Antoine Bret
02/11/2011 - 16:00
El zoológico de los plasmas en la alta atmósfera
En verano de 1989 investigadores estadounidenses grabaron varios fotogramas de intensos destellos luminosos provenientes de un fragmento de cielo, sin nubes localizado a más de 50 km de altura y que, sin que ellos se dieran cuenta en ese momento, se encontraban sobre lejanas nubes de tormenta. Habían hecho la primera observación de los llamados Transient Luminous Events o TLEs.
Francisco Carlos Parra Rojas - Sala de Juntas del Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC)
27/10/2011 - 14:00
Locating the gamma-ray emission region in AGN from multi-messenger observations
Relativistic jets in AGN, in general, and in blazars, in particular, are among the most energetic and powerful astrophysical phenomena known so far. Their relativistic nature provides them with the ability to emit profusely at all spectral ranges from radio wavelengths to gamma-rays. They display extreme variability at all time scales (from hours to years). Since the birth of gamma-ray astronomy, locating the origin of gamma-ray emission has...
Iván Agudo

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