Condensed Matter & Biological Physics Seminar: Jakub Kołacz (Naval Research Laboratory)

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Liquid Crystals as Cores and Claddings ABSTRACT: Liquid crystals (LCs) refer to structured mesophases that retain the ability to flow while exhibiting broken symmetries. One simple LC is the nematic phase (NLC), which is comprised of rod-shaped molecules that co-orient with a D∞h symmetry. Their anisotropic properties can be modeled locally using a prolate […]

Experimental particle physics seminar: Philip Harris (MIT)

Bloomberg 475

Title: Around the forces in 80 microseconds Abstract: With large amounts of data, a Higgs boson discovery, and world-leading constraints on an enormous amount of parameters and interactions, the Large Hadron Collider has been a phenomenal tool. However, it is going through a mid-life crisis. More data, more Higgs bosons, and more constraints are not bringing the same […]

Department-wide colloquium: Alessandra Corsi (JHU)

Bloomberg 272 - Schafler Auditorium

TITLE: Multi-messenger observations of gravitational waves sources: from LIGO to Cosmic Explorer, ABSTRACT: The direct detection of gravitational waves is revolutionizing our view of the universe and has opened a new era in the field of time-domain multi-messenger astronomy. In this talk, I will summarize key open questions on the astrophysics of stellar-mass compact objects […]

High energy physics theory seminar: Kwinten Fransen

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Quasinormal Modes from Penrose Limits ABSTRACT: In this talk, I will explain how to describe quasinormal modes with a large real frequency using Penrose limits. To do so, I first recall relevant aspects of the Penrose limit, as well as the plane wave spacetimes that arise in this limit, to subsequently tie this together with […]

Condensed matter and biological physics seminar: Raquel Queiroz (Columbia University)

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Quantum geometry: how to picture bound electrons in periodic lattices ABSTRACT: The concept of quantum geometry has been at the forefront of condensed matter physics, starting from how quantized Berry curvature leads to quantized Hall conductivity, anomalous velocities in Dirac metals, or other topological responses in a growing list of so-called topological materials. Recently, […]

Experimental particle physics seminar: Kevin Pedro (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory)

Bloomberg 475

Title: Dark QCD: the Next Frontier in Dark Matter Abstract: There has been a surge of interest in hidden valley models with new, strong forces, sometimes called "dark QCD". These models propose asymmetric, composite dark matter in the form of "dark hadrons" that would evade direct and indirect bounds as well as typical collider DM searches for […]

Department-wide all-hands meeting

Bloomberg 272 - Schafler Auditorium

All members of the department are invited and encouraged to attend.   The purpose of the meeting will be to make some announcements and to provide information and updates on various research, education, outreach, and administrative initiatives in the department.    As with the colloquium, a wine and cheese reception will follow.

Experimental particle physics seminar: Alexander Leder (Los Alamos National Laboratory)

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Photonic Band Gap R&D for Next Generation Axion Haloscopes ABSTRACT: Axions are a well-motivated dark matter candidate particle, which have the potential to simultaneously solve multiple problems in particle physics. As a dark matter candidate, large scale haloscopes, such as ADMX and HAYSTAC, aim to detect axions in the galactic halo by measuring the […]