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2026 Marie Curie Series – Painting the universe - A visual and musical exploration of space-time with Dr Karelle Siellez

  • - (ACST)
  • Adelaide University, Horace Lamb Lecture Theatre
    City Campus East, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia

Join us to explore the story of gravitational waves at the 2026 Claire Corani Memorial Lecture, part of the Australian Institute of Physics's Marie Curie Lecture Series. This unique presentation weaves together sound, art, and astrophysics to explore the cosmic collisions that create the elements of which we are made.

Through “multi-messenger” signals like kilonovae and gamma-ray bursts, discover how the cosmos communicates its most violent events. Blending scientific insights with creative expression, this talk reveals how listening to the Universe—and protecting its silence—can connect science, nature, and humanity.

 


The Claire Corani Memorial Prize in Physics will be presented at this event after the public lecture.

Please note that registration is required to receive the link to the livestream (free). Doors open 6:00 pm. Lecture and livestream begin 6:30 pm. 

The Claire Corani Memorial Prize in Physics will be presented at this event after the public lecture.

About the speaker...

Dr Karelle Siellez is an astrophysicist and lecturer at the University of Tasmania. A specialist in multi-messenger astronomy, she contributed to the first detection of a gamma-ray burst and gravitational waves from the same cosmic event, recognised with the 2017 Breakthrough Prize. She is also an award-winning science communicator who integrates art, sound, and storytelling into her work, making complex astrophysics accessible and inspiring. Karelle has lived and worked in France, the USA, and now Tasmania—where she divides her time between telescopes, classrooms, and the wilderness of sea and forest.

 

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