Featured Event
Colloquium – Shaozhi Li – Phonon Controlled Quantum Phenomena in Correlated Materials
Gallallee Hall Room 227 Gallalee Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesSpeaker: Shaozhi Li (Clemson University) Title: Phonon Controlled Quantum Phenomena in Correlated Materials Abstract: In quantum materials, millions of electrons and ions interact with each other, generating diverse quantum phenomena.
Colloquium – Steven Ehkert – 25 Years of the Chandra X-ray Observatory
Gallallee Hall Room 227 Gallalee Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesSpeaker: Steven Ehkert (NASA Marshall Space Flight Center) Title: 25 Years of the Chandra X-ray Observatory Abstract: The Chandra X-ray Observatory, launched on July 23rd 1999, has revolutionized our understanding
Colloquium – Man Leong Chan – AI in gravitational wave astronomy: successes and challenges
Gallallee Hall Room 227 Gallalee Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesSpeaker: Man Leong (Mervyn) Chan (University of British Columbia) Title: AI in gravitational wave astronomy: successes and challenges Abstract: The LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration has achieved ground-breaking success in detecting over 100
Colloquium – Vinicius Mikuni – Accelerating Discovery in High Energy Physics using AI
Gallallee Hall Room 227 Gallalee Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesSpeaker: Vinicius Mikuni (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) Title: Accelerating Discovery in High Energy Physics using AI Abstract: The past decade was marked by an exponential increase in the availability of
Colloquium – Taoli Cheng – Towards AI-assisted High Energy Physics: A New Paradigm of Understanding Elementary Particles
Gallallee Hall Room 227 Gallalee Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesSpeaker: Taoli Cheng (University of Montreal) Title: Towards AI-assisted High Energy Physics: A New Paradigm of Understanding Elementary Particles Abstract: The rapid evolution of artificial intelligence (AI) and deep learning
Theory Seminar by Seminar by Prof. Dr. Brian Swingle (Brandeis University)
Gallalee Hall Room 328Prof. Dr. Swingle from Brandeis University will discuss cosmology from random entanglement.