Events Archive

Title Date and Time Location
Physics Colloquia: A new concept to measure geometrically the expansion of the universe
Matt McQuinn, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: The nuclear physics of heavy element origins
Rebecca Surman, University of Notre Dame
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: From the Early Days of Quantum Mechanics to Modern Analytical Practice: The History and Future of X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy
Gerald Seidler, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: The Black Hole Information Paradox: A Resolution on the Horizon?
Netta Engelhardt, MIT
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Statistical mechanics of collective behaviour
Thierry Mora, ENS / Chicago
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: P5: The next decade of US particle physics
Sarah Demers, Yale University
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Fracton Quantum Matter
Michael Hermele, University of Colorado Boulder
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Topology and “impossible” electronic devices
Andrea Young, UC Santa Barbara
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Programmable Quantum Nanophotonics
Arka Majumdar, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Quasi-periodic driving: a tool in the quantum mechanic's toolbox
Anushya Chandran, Boston University
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Attosecond Science, from Atomic Physics to Condensed Matter
David Reis, Stanford University and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Thermal and Thermoelectric Transport in Low-Dimensional Materials
Philip Kim, Harvard
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Dark Matter Axion Searches
Gray Rybka, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Three-Dimensional Simulations of Core-Collapse Supernova Explosions: The Emerging Theory and Astrophysical Predictions
Adam Burrows, Princeton
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Black holes and quantum information
Tom Hartman, Cornell
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Quantum alchemy with two-dimensional materials
Matthew Yankowitz, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Programmable control of indistinguishable particles: from sampling to clocks to qubits
Adam Kaufman, University of Colorado Boulder
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Electromagnetism in brain imaging
Samu Taulu, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: The search for dark matter particles with DAMIC
Alvaro Chavarria, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Strong interaction matter in the universe
Achim Schwenk, TU Darmstadt
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Signals of a Quantum Universe
Daniel Green, University of California San Diego
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Searching for new forces at micron scale and other fun tricks with levitated microsphere
Giorgio Gratta, Stanford University
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: A new approach to measuring neutrino mass
Elise Novitski, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: From quarks to nuclei: computing the Standard Model
Phiala Shanahan, MIT
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Local quantum probes of quantum matter
Amir Yacoby, Harvard
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Quantum Materials: A View from the Lattice
Joe Checkelsky, MIT
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Bosonic Quantum Information Processing
Liang Jiang, University of Chicago
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: The fine structure of quantum spin ice 
Chris Laumann, Boston University
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: On Ising’s Model of Ferromagnetism
Peter Armitage, Johns Hopkins University
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Simulating Nuclear Physics from Nature's Fundamental Interactions: From Classical Computations to Quantum Simulations
Zohreh Davoudi, University of Maryland
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: How to wake a sleeping elephant: Insights into quark (and gluon) confinement from the buzz of wee partons
Raju Venugopalan, BNL
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Nuclear Astrophysics with Numerical Relativity
David Radice, Penn State
PAA A-110
Physics Colloquia: Ghostly Messengers of the Cosmos
Irene Tamborra, Niels Bohr Institute
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Cosmic Laboratories for Nuclear Physics
Almudena Arcones, Darmstadt
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: The secret lives of quarks: from the lab to neutron stars
Jacquelyn Noronha-Hostler, University of Illinois
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Electron transport in Weyl and Dirac semimetals
Anton Andreev, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: The “Who Ordered That” Collider
Nathaniel Craig, UC Santa Barbara
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Physics Is More Than Problem-solving: Building Inclusivity and Belonging by Practicing Professionalism
Marty Baylor, Carleton College
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: LIGO past, present, and future
David Shoemaker, MIT
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Radioactive atoms and molecules for nuclear science
Ronald Garcia Ruiz, MIT
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia, Dark Universe Science Center: Creating Matter (Without Antimatter!) in the Laboratory
Jason Detwiler, University of Washington / CENPA
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Twists and turns of superconductivity from a repulsive interaction
Andrey V. Chubukov, University of Minnesota
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Discovering the Dark Universe with Artificial Intelligence
Shih-Chieh Hsu, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: `Programming' Quantum Simulators with Atoms and Ions
Peter Zoller, Center for Quantum Physics, University of Innsbruck, and IQOQI, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Innsbruck, Austria
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Direct measurement of neutrino mass with sub-eV sensitivity by KATRIN
Sanshiro Enomoto, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Searches for Neutrino-less Double Beta Decay and Dark Matter Direct Interactions
2015 Nobel Laureate Art McDonald, Gray Chair, Emeritus, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: The Heavyweight W boson - an Upset to the Standard Model of Particle Physics
Ashutosh Kotwal, Duke University
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia, Dark Universe Science Center: Axionic ripples in the sky
Renée Hložek, University of Toronto
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: 2022 Nobel Prize Colloquium
Jason Detwiler & Boris Blinov, University of Washington
PAA A-102
Physics Colloquia: Learning the shape of the immune and protein universe
Armita Nourmohammad, University of Washington
PAA A-102
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