- UD officially acquires Chrysler property in Newark
- United Way campaign concludes with contributions topping $196,000
- UD launches Center for Political Communication
- Education professor inducted into Laureate Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi
- UD awarded funds for cyberinfrastructure development
- UD figure skaters excel at Eastern Sectionals
- Princeton anthropologist addresses human language and art in Darwin lecture
- Violinist Xiang Gao to lead China tour in June
- Delaware art history grad student honored for best paper
- MSERC programs in math education receive continued funding
- UD Library Associates elects officers for 2010
- Richards to return to faculty in College of Health Sciences
- UD Police seek information about injured student
- For the Record, Nov. 20, 2009
- UD in the News, Nov. 20, 2009
- UD planning teachers institute in cooperation with Yale National Initiative
- PCS, Academy of Lifelong Learning receive award
- Record 334 students receive General Honors Awards
- Vaughan elected interim president of national education organization
- Lambda Chi Alpha completes annual food drive
- Second Life Outsider art show seen a success
- Dec. 2: Former RNC chairperson Ed Gillespie to speak
- UD Collegiate Figure Skating Team wins Cornell competition
- UD students tour CIA headquarters
- Interdisciplinary Humanities Research Center established
- American Vacuum Society honors UD doctoral student
- UD hosts annual Delaware Space Grant Research Symposium
- UD ranks among top institutions in study abroad
- UD's second hydrogen fuel cell bus carries special guests
- Junior Chefs Rockfish Cook-Off accepting entries
- More News >>
- Dec. 2: Former RNC chairperson Ed Gillespie to speak
- Nov. 30-Dec. 4: College School schedules book fair
- Dec. 1: LGBT community to mark World AIDS Day
- Dec. 3: Center plans Pre-Kwanzaa Celebration
- Dec. 6: New Castle County Alumni Club plans Winterthur holiday event
- Dec. 6: UD alumni events planned in Baltimore, Philadelphia
- Dec. 6: 'Jams for Jimmy' benefit concert to be held in Wilmington
- Dec. 7: Black Student Union to present program on racial stereotypes
- Dec. 12: Blue Hens men's basketball team plans toy drive
- May 7: Phi Kappa Phi plans ceremony
- Oct. 11-Nov. 29: International Film Series offered Sundays at Trabant
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Assessing Obama' series to feature faculty, national speakers
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Research on Women' fall lecture series announced
- Sept. 18-Dec. 18: Library's 'Lion Awakes' exhibition looks at reggae, Marley
- Sept. 26-May 1: Take in an opera at the Met with UD matinee tickets
- More What's Happening >>
- UD calendar >>
- Nov. 24 is final enrollment day for Flexible Spending Accounts
- Jan. 6, 28: Employee Nights at UD basketball games set
- Changes ahead for recognition of student honors
- Bicyclists, motorists need to watch out for one another
- Nominations sought for Redding Award recognizing campus diversity efforts
- Nov. 30: Chemical hygiene, lab safety survey deadline
- Princeton Review announces student survey
- UD's Winter Faculty Institute kicks off Jan. 5
- State offers UD faculty, staff free health risk assessment
- Upgrade to Windows 7 available for UD students
- More Campus FYI >>
8:23 a.m., Sept. 16, 2009----If you're ready for a truly cosmic experience, you won't want to miss the Vernon Public Lecture Series this fall at the University of Delaware.
Nationally known speakers will transport audiences on a quest to find new planets on Sept. 26, journey back in time to see how modern astronomy was really invented on Oct. 17, and explore the prospect of “dark energy” and a runaway universe on Nov. 7.
Hosted by the Delaware Asteroseismic Research Center at UD, the series is named for Harcourt C. “Ace” Vernon (1907-1978), who was one of the founders and the first chairman of the board of trustees of Mt. Cuba Astronomical Observatory in Greenville, Del. The observatory is sponsoring the series in Vernon's memory.
A chemical engineer with bachelor's and master's degrees from MIT, Vernon worked for the DuPont Company in several capacities including as director of the Engineering Research Laboratory, a position he held until his retirement in 1972. He had a strong interest in many areas of science and technology, which led him into such fields as hydroponics, computing, the tracking of artificial satellites, and astronomy.
“We are so pleased to offer this series to the public in honor of Ace Vernon and with the support of Mt. Cuba Astronomical Observatory,” notes Judi Provencal, director of the Delaware Asteroseismic Research Center. “These renowned speakers will share new views of the cosmos in lectures that are both educational and entertaining. We look forward to welcoming people of all ages to the series.”
Each lecture is free and will be held on a Saturday evening at the University's Newark campus. Attendees are asked to register in advance on this Web page to ensure adequate seating.
On Saturday, Sept. 26, at 7 p.m., at the Clayton Hall Conference Center, Harry Shipman, UD's Annie Jump Cannon Professor of Physics and Astronomy, will present “Planets Beyond Our Solar System.”
While the quest to detect planets beyond our solar system actually began in the mid-19th century, the first confirmed detection -- of a giant planet in a four-day orbit around the nearby star 51 Peg -- was made in 1995, according to Shipman.
“As of August 2009, there are 373 known planets outside our solar system, although we are not yet capable of detecting Earth-sized worlds,” Shipman says. “We now believe that a significant fraction of sun-like stars are accompanied by planets, leading to the question of whether some might support extraterrestrial life.”
Shipman received a bachelor's degree from Harvard and master's and doctoral degrees from the California Institute of Technology. For most of his 20-plus year career at UD, his research activities have concentrated on astronomy, in particular on white dwarf stars, the future life-cycle stages of low-mass stars like our sun.
Science teaching is a secondary research area of Shipman's. His innovations in science teaching, developed in cooperation with other faculty in Delaware's Problem-Based Learning group, have focused primarily on ways to incorporate group activity into large classes. Many of these group activities ask students to make decisions about current research projects, both Shipman's own and others that are active nationally.
Michael Lemonick, former senior science writer at TIME Magazine, will provide a fascinating account of how a poor musician's observation led to a whole new world of scientific inquiry in “How William and Caroline Herschel Invented Modern Astronomy” on Saturday, October 17, at 7 p.m. in the Rodney Room of the Perkins Student Center.
Lemonick has been a journalist and author for more than 25 years -- 20 of them at TIME Magazine, where he wrote more than 50 cover stories on topics ranging from climate change to genomics to particle physics before stepping down as a senior science writer in 2007. The author of four books, he teaches writing at Princeton University and is the senior staff writer for Climate Central (http://www.climatecentral.org/team.html).
Alex Filippenko, professor of astronomy at the University of California Berkeley, will provide the capstone lecture -- “Dark Energy and the Runaway Universe”--on Saturday, November 7, at 7 p.m. at Clayton Hall Conference Center.
Observations of very distant exploding stars (supernovae) show that the expansion of the universe is now speeding up, rather than slowing down, according to Filippenko.
Over the largest distances, our universe seems to be dominated by a “dark energy” -- originally suggested by Einstein -- that stretches the very fabric of space itself faster and faster with time, he says.
An observational astronomer, Filippenko uses the Hubble Space Telescope and other observatories to study supernovae, active galaxies, black holes, gamma-ray bursts, and the expansion of the universe. A member of the National Academy of Sciences, he is one of the world's most cited astronomers, with some 600 scientific publications to his credit, as well as an award-winning textbook.
Filippenko also has appeared on numerous television programs including Stephen Hawking's Universe, The History Channel's The Universe, and introductory astronomy video courses produced in association with The Teaching Company.
Article by Tracey Bryant


