Program

Thursday, April 11, 2019

09:00

Welcome

Lewis Ball

09:15

Enabling Real-time Sub-millisecond Timescale Imaging in Large Radio Interferometers

Nithya Thyagarajan

09:45

Accelerated Digital Signal Processing for Large Arrays

Nolan Denman
10:15

Coffee Break

11:00

The ngVLA Reference Array Configuration

Viviana Rosero
11:30

Electromagnetic Component Development for Radio Astronomy Instrumentation at the NRAO Central Development Lab (CDL)

Lisa Locke
12:00

Lunch Break: Fry Spring Station

14:00

Radio Emission from the Global Magnetosphere of a Young M Dwarf

Jackie Villadsen
14:30

First Horizon-scale Images of Black Holes: Very Neartime Forecast

Kazu Akiyama
15:00

Coffee Break

15:30

Keynote: Cold Gas in Nearby Galaxies in the ALMA Era

Adam Leroy
16:30

Coffee Break

17:00

Evolution and Kinematics of Molecular Gas in the Central Molecular Zone of the Galactic Center

Natalie Butterfield
17:30

The Star Forming Potential of Clouds on the Fringe of the Milky Way

Will Armentrout
18:00

Adjourn

18:30

Dinner: The Local

 Friday, April 12, 2019

09:00

Coffee & Pastries

09:30

CN: A Sub-Thermally Excited Molecule Tracing the Atmospheres of Protoplanetary Disks

Ryan Loomis
10:00

The Molecular Emissions Structure of the Flying Saucer Protoplanetary Disk

Dary Ruiz Rodriquez
10:30

Coffee Break

11:00

Into the Void: Launching and Propagation of Protostellar Jets in both Simulations and Observations

Jon Ramsey
11:30

The Structures of Embedded Disks with ALMA/the VLA

Patrick Sheehan
12:00

Career Panel

13:00

Lunch Break

14:00

Probing Gas Inflow in Starless Clump Candidates

Brian Svoboda
14:30

A Healthy Diet of Salt

Adam Ginsburg
15:00

Understanding the role of Magnetic Fields in a Giant Molecular Cloud

Laura Fissel
15:30

Coffee Break

16:15

From Cloud to Cores: A Multi-scale View of the ISM Distribution in the Carina Nebula

David Rebolledo
16:45

GOTHAM and ARKHAM: First Results from Programs to Explore Aromatic Chemistry at the Earliest Stages of Star Formation

Brett McGuire
17:15

Closing Remarks

Connect with NRAO

The NSF National Radio Astronomy Observatory and NSF Green Bank Observatory are facilities of the U.S. National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.