Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma

A podcast by Oxford University - Vineri

Vineri

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95 Episoade

  1. A New Twist on Topology: The Rise of “Moiré Materials”

    Publicat: 21.02.2025
  2. Anyons: New Types of Particles in Quantum Physics

    Publicat: 21.02.2025
  3. Topology in the Physics of Condensed Matter

    Publicat: 21.02.2025
  4. The Hubble Tension

    Publicat: 15.11.2024
  5. Cosmic strings and gravitational waves from the early Universe

    Publicat: 15.11.2024
  6. Chirality in living systems

    Publicat: 11.06.2024
  7. Imaging living systems

    Publicat: 11.06.2024
  8. Statistical physics of living systems

    Publicat: 11.06.2024
  9. The Miracle of Quantum Error Correction

    Publicat: 15.03.2024
  10. Simulating physics beyond computer power

    Publicat: 15.03.2024
  11. A liquid of quarks and gluons

    Publicat: 15.03.2024
  12. Possible sources for the gravitational wave background

    Publicat: 28.11.2023
  13. Searching for the origin of black hole mergers in the Universe with gravitational waves

    Publicat: 28.11.2023
  14. Gravitational radiation: an overview

    Publicat: 28.11.2023
  15. How the weird and wonderful properties of magnetised laser plasmas could ignite fusion-energy research

    Publicat: 02.06.2023
  16. Stellarators: twisty tokamaks that could be the future of fusion

    Publicat: 02.06.2023
  17. Magnetic confinement fusion: Science that’s hotter than a Kardashian Instagram post

    Publicat: 02.06.2023
  18. The spaghettification of stars by supermassive black holes: understanding one of nature’s most extreme events

    Publicat: 03.03.2023
  19. Extreme value statistics and the theory of rare events

    Publicat: 03.03.2023
  20. Inflation and the Very Early Universe

    Publicat: 03.03.2023

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Learn about quantum mechanics, black holes, dark matter, plasma, particle accelerators, the Large Hadron Collider and other key Theoretical Physics topics. The Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics holds morning sessions consisting of three talks, pitched to explain an area of our research to an audience familiar with physics at about second-year undergraduate level.

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