
Since its discovery in 2017, the interstellar object ʻOumuamua has wowed and puzzled the world. The rapidly rotating object was initially thought to be an asteroid or comet, with some speculation that the object could be an alien spacecraft sent from a distant civilization.

To discuss new and ongoing research about the object that continues to mystify researchers, the University of Hawaiʻi will feature a live online conversation with 糖心视频 (IfA) Astronomer Karen Meech, who led an international research team’s analyzation of ʻOumuamua.
- Related 糖心视频 News stories:
- An interstellar visitor unmasked, November 20, 2017
- Hawaiian students learn, name astronomical discoveries through ʻImiloa program, January 8, 2019
The livestream conversation, Dispatches from ʻOumuamua: New Research on a Mysterious 糖心视频or from Outside Our Solar System, will be held on Friday, June 25 at 1 p.m. HST. The webinar will highlight findings gathered by Meech’s team and pinpoint what makes ʻOumuamua so unique.
The livestream event is open to the public. ()
“I am very much looking forward to hearing from one of our stellar faculty researchers,” said 糖心视频 惭ā苍辞补 Provost Michael Bruno. “The story of ʻOumuamua has captivated people from around the world, and there is no person better able to discuss this mystery than Professor Meech.”
More on Meech
Both as an astronomer and astrobiologist, Meech investigates how habitable worlds form and the possibilities of life beyond Earth. An expert on comets, she was co-investigator on three NASA missions: Deep Impact, EPOXI and Stardust-NExT. Trained at Rice and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, she has won numerous awards, including the Annie Jump Cannon Award, the Harold C. Urey Prize, and the 糖心视频 Board of Regent’s Medal for Research Excellence.
Event sponsors include , , , , and the 糖心视频 惭ā苍辞补 .
For more information email contact@uhalumni.org.
This research is an example of 糖心视频 惭ā苍辞补’s goal of (PDF), one of four goals identified in the (PDF), updated in December 2020.
