
2025 Horizons Lectures in Physics
Kareem J. El-Badry
Caltech, USA
Biography
Kareem El-Badry is an Assistant Professor of Astronomy at the California Institute of Technology. His research focuses on binary stars, black holes, and unusual outcomes of stellar evolution, combining large-scale surveys, targeted observations, and stellar modeling to understand how stars and compact objects form and evolve. He earned his Ph.D. in astrophysics from UC Berkeley in 2021 and was a Junior Fellow at the Harvard/Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics before joining Caltech in 2023. He also holds an adjunct appointment at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, where he has been a frequent visitor since 2016.
The Gaia binary star revolution
Lecture - Solvay Room on June 2nd at 4:00 PM
By precisely measuring the motions stars on the sky over time, the Gaia mission is conducting a comprehensive census of the Milky Way’s binary stars. These data are transformative both for population modeling and for discovery of rare objects. I will describe our emerging view of the populations of black holes, neutron stars, and white dwarfs in au-scale binaries, focusing in particular on their mass, period, and eccentricity distributions. Compared to previous surveys, Gaia is revealing post-interaction binaries in wider orbits, whose properties are difficult to explain with standard binary evolution models. I will discuss how the Gaia catalogs can be leveraged for statistical inference, despite their complex selection function, and how they can discriminate between competing formation models.
COFFEE AND TEA WILL BE SERVED AT 3:45 P.M
Other Lectures and visits
June 3rd
KUL
June 4th
ULiège
June 5th
Royal Observatory