Join guest speaker Rodrigo Córdova Rosado on a journey through the cosmos as you explore some of the universe's deepest mysteries, such as dark matter and black holes! 

This free Planetarium program is part of our celebration of Native American Heritage Month. We are honored to be welcoming Indigenous scientists, researchers and organizations into the Museum and onto our digital platforms throughout November. 

Reserve your FREE Tickets

Date and Time

Sunday, November 17 | 3:30 pm

Audience

All Ages

Location

Charles Hayden Planetarium View Map

Length

45 Minutes

Price

Free with Pre-Registration

Language

English
Reserve your FREE Tickets

Date and Time

Sunday, November 17 | 3:30 pm

Audience

All Ages

Location

Charles Hayden Planetarium View Map

Length

45 Minutes

Price

Free with Pre-Registration

Language

English

Join guest speaker Rodrigo Córdova Rosado on a journey through the cosmos as you explore some of the universe's deepest mysteries, such as dark matter and black holes! 

This free Planetarium program is part of our celebration of Native American Heritage Month. We are honored to be welcoming Indigenous scientists, researchers and organizations into the Museum and onto our digital platforms throughout November. 

Featuring

Image
Rodrigo E. L. Córdova Rosado (Osage Nation)

Rodrigo E. L. Córdova Rosado (Osage Nation)

PhD candidate, Princeton University

Rodrigo E. L. Córdova Rosado (Osage Nation) is a final year PhD candidate in the Astrophysical Sciences Department at Princeton University. He studies the properties and impact of black holes on galactic evolution by measuring the arrangement of active galaxies (known as quasars) on the sky. Rodrigo was born and raised in Puerto Rico, and lived there until he graduated from high school. He majored in Astrophysics and Physics at Harvard University. He also did an MPhil program in the Archaeology of the Americas with a focus in Archaeoastronomy at Cambridge University as a Gates Cambridge Scholar. As part of his archaeological work, he is interested in monumental architecture and the ways it may encode the way ancestral communities saw the cosmos.