
The Origins Centre at Wits is hosting Dr Adrian Tiplady, the Square Kilometre Array Site Bid Manager, who is driving South Africa's bid to host the largest radio telescope in the world.
Tiplady will deliver a talk entitled The Square Kilometre Array: Searching for the Origins of the Universe on Tuesday, the 24th of April 2012 at 18:00 at the Origins Centre.
Tiplady completed his PhD at Rhodes University, and joined the South African SKA Project in 2005. In 2011, he was named as one of Mail & Guardian's ‘200 Young South Africans to have Lunch With’.
The process for the allocation of a preferred site to host the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) radio telescope is nearing its end. The SKA Project is mankind's quest to build the largest, and most sensitive, radio telescope in history.
This next-generation scientific facility will probe the very beginnings of the Universe to answer the most fundamental questions facing science today: What is Dark Matter? What is Dark Energy? What are the laws of nature, and how did they guide the evolution of the first stars and galaxies? Are we alone?
South Africa, along with eight other African countries, is leading the race to host this giant facility as well as in the development of scientific understanding and technological innovation. This talk will look at all aspects of this international project - from what we will discover in the future, to what we have already put on the ground in preparation of hosting the SKA.
Bookings are essential. To book, email ask@origins.org.za. Cost: R45 per person; R35 for Wits students and staff.