
Join us for Café Scientifique
Interested in science? Want to learn more about the latest technology breakthroughs in normal English, minus the jargon? Then Café Scientifique Pittsburgh at Carnegie Science Center is the place to be!
Café Sci is THE place in Pittsburgh where anyone interested in science can get together in a virtual setting to discuss today’s science issues with experts, and best of all… you can ask your own questions! After a brief talk by our monthly guest speaker, the evening is dedicated to a question-and-answer session.
Presented by: |
Café Sci: The Search for Planet Nine
The Search for Planet Nine
Upcoming virtual lecture:
Mon., July 11
7–9 pm
Register for the free virtual lecture!
Guest speaker:
Dr. Michael E. Brown, PhD
Director, Caltech Center for Comparative Planetary Evolution

Mike Brown scans the skies searching for and intensely studying distant bodies in our solar system in the hope of gaining insight into how our planet and the planets around it came to be. In this quest, he has discovered dozens of dwarf planets (and demoted one object from planet to dwarf planet) and is currently hot on the trail of Planet Nine — a hypothesized body that is possibly the fifth largest planet of our solar system.
About Dr. Michael Brown
Dr. Michael Brown is the Richard and Barbara Rosenberg Professor of Planetary Astronomy at the California Institute of Technology and has been on the faculty there since 1996. He has won many awards and honors for his scholarship, including the Urey Prize for best young planetary scientist from the American Astronomical Society’s Division of Planetary Sciences; a Presidential Early Career Award; a Sloan Fellowship; the 2012 Kavli Prize in Astrophysics, and, of course, the one that started his career, an honorable mention in his fifth-grade science fair. He was inducted into the National Academy of Science in 2014. He was also named one of Wired Online’s Top Ten Sexiest Geeks in 2006, the mention of which never ceases to make his wife laugh. Feature articles about Brown and his work have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and Discover, and his discoveries have been covered on front pages of countless newspapers worldwide. In 2006 he was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People as well as one of Los Angeles Magazine’s Most Powerful Angelinos. He has authored over 150 scientific papers. He is a frequent invited lecturer at astronomical meetings as well as at science museums, planetariums, and college campuses. At Caltech he teaches undergraduate and graduate students, in classes ranging from introductory geology to the formation and evolution of the solar system. He was especially pleased to be awarded the Richard P. Feynman Award for Outstanding Teaching at Caltech.
Brown received his AB from Princeton in 1987, and then his MA and PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1990 and 1994, respectively. Brown is the author of “How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming”, an award-winning, best-selling memoir of the discoveries leading to the demotion of Pluto. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Astronomy Magazine, and elsewhere.
Register for Café Sci
The event is FREE to attend, but preregistration is required ! Carnegie Science Center would like to continue to offer programs like Café Sci, Women in STEM, and others. Please consider making a donation when you register. Once you sign up, you’ll get an email confirmation. Have a question for Dr. Brown? You’ll be able to type your questions in the Q&A section during the presentation!
We want to hear from you!
What impact has Café Sci had on you? Are you a scientist interested in speaking at Café Sci? Do you have a recommendation for a speaker or topic? Contact us at info@carnegiesciencecenter.org.
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