Together with Cherokee High School, UNC Asheville’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, and Department of Languages and Literatures are hosting a special lunchtime talk by Corey Gray and Sharon Yellowfly (Siksika Nation), who will share their work translating the physics of black holes and spacetime into the Blackfoot language.

When: Thursday November 18th, 2021; 12:00-1:00pm (Eastern Time)

Where: This event will be held virtually via Zoom at this link.

Registration is not required, but if you would like to receive an email reminder with details on how to join this event via Zoom, please provide your name and email in this form.

About the Speakers:

Corey Gray is Scottish & Blackfoot and a member  of the Siksika Nation of Alberta, Canada. He grew  up in southern California and received Bachelor of  Science degrees in Physics and Applied  Mathematics from Humboldt State University  (HSU).   After undergrad, he was hired as a Detector  Operator by Caltech in 1998 to work for the  astronomy project, LIGO (Laser Interferometer  Gravitational wave Observatory) in Washington  State. At LIGO, Corey worked on teams to both  build and operate gravitational wave detectors.   The LIGO Scientific Collaboration (LSC) made  historic news in 2016 by announcing the first direct  detection of gravitational waves, which helps prove  a prediction made 100 years earlier by Albert  Einstein!  In his free time, Corey likes to backpack, travel,  salsa dance, cross-country ski, watch films, share  science with the public, and kayak (with wooden  kayak he recently built).

Sharon Yellowfly was born and raised on the Blackfoot Indian Reserve in Southern Alberta,  Canada.  (The Blackfoot Indian Reserve is now known as Siksika Nation.)  She was educated in a  system set up for indigenous students called Indian Residential Schools.  The boarding school  she attended nearest her community was Crowfoot Indian Residential School and overseen by  nuns and priests. Blackfoot was her first language and she was introduced to English at the boarding school.   She received a BA in Anthropology with honors at a California State University in Southern  California.  At the time, she was one of the rare Native Americans to go into the field.  Ms. Yellowfly is currently finishing a dictionary of her language.  She has been working on it for  over 40 years.  She has four children and resides in the mountains of Southern California, but she goes home to  the  reserve every summer.

This event is made possible with funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.

Questions? Please contact: Britt Lundgren (blundgre@unca.edu) or Malia Crowe-Skulski (malia.crowe@ccs-nc.org)

Additional links:

Laser Interferometer Gravitational wave Observatory (LIGO) in Washington State

LIGO Press Release from its first detection of gravitational waves (Feb. 11, 2016)

Gravitational Waves Press Release Translated Into The Blackfoot Language (Sharon Yellowfly / YouTube)

LIGO Team Awarded the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics