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<div>Dear everyone,<br>
<br>
Next week we will have the first EO seminar of the year. I look forward to seeing you<br>
all there.<br>
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<span aria-label="" class="c-mrkdwn__br" data-stringify-type="paragraph-break"></span><b data-stringify-type="bold">Speaker: Deepika Venkattu</b><br>
<b data-stringify-type="bold">When and where: Thursday 25 of Januar, 13:00 in A5:1003</b><br>
<b data-stringify-type="bold">Title: Radio supernovae - a low-frequency perspective</b><br>
<b>Abstract:</b><br>
Supernovae are the explosive end stages of stars and despite being well-studied, they still pose unanswered questions. In the radio, we see synchrotron emission from the interaction of the supernova ejecta with the dense circumstellar material (CSM). With the
onset of the Square Kilometre Array era, there is renewed focus on the low-frequency radio sky, with many technological advancements from the likes of GMRT, VLITE, MWA and the recent Very Long Baseline Interferometry pipeline at 150 MHz with the International
LOFAR Telescope.<br>
In this talk, I will present the topic of my PhD - exploring the nascent field of supernovae science at low radio frequencies with LOFAR. We will discuss technical challenges and my work using LOFAR to study supernovae in M51 and M31. Such low-frequency studies
and technical advancements will help us explore existing research questions but also pave the way for new science at low frequencies.<br>
<br>
Best,<br>
Haakon (on behalf of the organisers )<br>
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