Astronomer to speak on the place of humanity
MEDIA RELEASE
April 1, 2018
Astronomer
to speak on the place of humanity in the
universe
Dr. Jennifer Wiseman, a senior American astronomer, will speak on astrophysics and its relevance to religion, at the University of Auckland (lecture theatre B28, Library Building, Alfred St) at 7 p.m. on Wednesday 11th April. Similar lectures will be held in Wellington on 10th April and Dunedin on 4th April.
Dr Wiseman’s Auckland topic will be: Eclipsed? The Significance of Human Life in an Incredible Universe.
Jennifer is able to communicate the vastness of the known and imagined universe, and at the same time has the capacity to wonder whether and where there is life outside our planet. She is a part of a research group that is now discovering possibly habitable exoplanets around other stars.
While still a research student at MIT,
Jennifer discovered a comet that is named for her. After
research fellowships at the National Radio Astronomy
Observatory and the Johns Hopkins University, she took up
her current position as a senior astrophysicist at the
Goddard Space Flight Centre, where she previously headed the
Laboratory for Exoplanets and Stellar Astrophysics. She is
the senior project scientist for the Hubble Space Telescope.
She is also Director of the Dialogue on Science, Ethics and
Religion of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science (aaas.org). As well as her scientific work, Jennifer
is known for her ability to communicate the excitement of
science to the general public.
Jennifer is
in New Zealand to speak at the Public Communication of
Science and Technology Conference in Dunedin, April 3 & 4
(pcst2018.org/pcst18).
The Auckland lecture is sponsored
by New Zealand Christians in Science/Te Kāhui Whakapono ki
Nga Kaipūtaiao o Te Motu (NZCIS.org) and the Maclaurin
Chapel at the University of Auckland. The Dunedin and
Wellington lectures are co-hosted by the Centre for Theology
and Public Issues (Otago) and NZCIS. All are welcome.