KIAA Forum 2019: The Future of Gravitational Wave Astrophysics
28-29 November, 2019
Group Photo
The direct detection of gravitational waves in 2015 opened a new window for us astronomers to explore the Universe. Since then, astronomy entered a new era. Through this window, we have now detected stellar-mass binary black holes, discovered a population of very massive black holes that had never been seen before, and we testified the validity of general relativity in a regime of extremely strong gravity. By joining the observations of electromagnetic and gravitational waves, we have also established the correlation between neutron star mergers and short gamma-ray bursts, constrained the equation of state of neutron stars to an unprecedentedly high accuracy, and measured in a completely independent way the Hubble constant of the local universe. In the next few years, along with the steady upgrade of the ground-based detectors and continuous operation of the pulsar timing arrays, new discoveries will certainly come and, moreover, new technologies will become ripe.
The rapid development in gravitational wave observation is creating a paradigm shift in astrophysics. In this time of imminent breakthrough, the Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics at Peking University will host the forum “The Future of Gravitational Wave Astrophysics” during 28-29 November 2019. This forum will provide a platform for researchers inside China and abroad to exchange ideas and collaborate in the following fields:
1) Gravitational wave experiments
2) Electromagnetic counterparts
3) Astrophysics
4) Fundamental physics and cosmology
The forum will feature the following open questions:
SOC:
Fukun Liu
Qingjuan Yu
Renxin Xu
Bing Zhang
Kejia Lee
Lijing Shao
Xian Chen
LOC:
Xian Chen
Lijing Shao
Kohei Inayoshi
Shuyan Liu
Min Sun
Important Date:
Registration Deadline: 28 October, 2019
Date of Forum: 28-29 November, 2019
Date for Departure: 30 November, 2019
Venue: Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University
Forum website: http://kiaa.pku.edu.cn/astroforum19/