Carnegie's Capital Science Evenings have moved to Thursday nights!
| Thursday |
October 23, 2003 6:45 PM |
John Allen Paulos
Mathematics
Department, Temple
University
A Mathematician Plays the Stock Market (video on demand not available)
Mathematician and author John Allen Paulos will talk about his personal attempt to impose the rules of order and science on the stock market. Once a heavy investor, he learned the hard way that having a head for numbers does not mean much when it comes to predicting the markets. You won't need a mathematical background to enjoy his lecture, but a sense of humor is required.
| Thursday |
November 20, 2003 6:45 PM |
Irving
Weissman
Department of Pathology and Developmental Biology, Stanford
University School of Medicine
Director, Institute for Cancer/Stem Cell Biology and Medicine, Stanford University
Medical Center
Stem Cells: Biology, Medicine and Beyond (video on demand: low bandwidth - ; high bandwidth - )
Research shows that adult stem cells may be responsible for the regenerationand perhaps generationof many, if not all tissues and organs. Some of these stem cells are now used for medical therapies and others are ready to be tested. Surprisingly, it appears that cancers also can use the stem cell model for regeneration and growth. A better understanding of cancer stem cells may soon change the way we treat this pervasive disease.
| Thursday |
February 5, 2004 6:45 PM |
Wendy
Freedman
Crawford H. Greenewalt Director, Carnegie Observatories
Exploring the Universe in the New Millennium - (video on demand: low bandwidth - ; high bandwidth - )
Astronomers today have ambitious plans for new telescopes on the ground and in space, addressing questions previously undreamed of a century ago. Join Dr. Freedman as she discusses some of the most recent astronomical discoveries, including our rapidly accelerating universe, and learn what astronomers are up to as we enter a second century of cosmic exploration.
| Thursday |
March 11, 2004 6:45 PM |
John
Holdren
John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
Meeting
the Energy-Climate Challenge - (video on demand: low bandwidth -
;
high bandwidth -
;
Slide Presentation -
;
PDF Format 362 KB
)
Providing the energy we need to achieve and sustain prosperity while avoiding a climatic disaster from greenhouse gases will be the most demanding technological challenge of the 21st century. Learn more about this complicated dilemma and proposals for maintaining this important balance in our future.
| Thursday |
April 1, 2004 6:45 PM |
Eric
Kandel
Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, Columbia University
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
The Long and Short of Long-Term Memory - (video on demand: low bandwidth - ; high bandwidth - )
Eric Kandel's research on how our brains store long-term and short-term memories led to his sharing the Nobel Prize in 2000. His work has helped delineate the brain's molecular mechanisms for these two types of memories.
| Thursday |
April 29, 2004 6:45 PM |
Dava
Sobel
Author
Galileo's Life and Times - (video on demand not available)
Explore the world of astronomer Galileo with Dava Sobel, former New York Times science writer and best-selling author of Galileo's Daughter. Sobel's translation of 124 letters Galileo's daughter wrote to her father provides extraordinary insights into the personal lifeincluding the science, the religion and the politicsof this remarkable man.
Join
Carnegie astronomer Alan
Dressler as he discusses
The First Stars and Galaxies in the Universe
as part of The Smithsonian Resident Associate Program
Monday, June 7, 2004, 6:30 p.m. at the Carnegie Institution
Registration is required; call 202.357.3030 or visit www.residentassociates.org/com/universe.asp
for details