J.Pniewski & L.Infeld Colloquium
2018/2019 | 2019/2020 | 2020/2021 | 2021/2022 | 2022/2023 | 2023/2024 | 2024/2025
Information about earlier events available here:
"Precise determination of the cosmic distances and the Universe’s expansion mysteries"
In my presentation I will discuss the most precise and accurate methods for cosmic distance determinations. I will also explain how these methods can be used to calibrate other long-range distance indicators, which allow us to calibrate Supernovae Ia. Finally I will discuss how accurately we expect to determine the expansion rate of the Universe in the near future, and how this will impact the current discrepancy between different values of the expansion rate of the Universe as obtained with different techniques.
Pobierz nagranie / Download the recording
First results from the Muon g-2 experiment at Fermilab and theory predictions and interpretations
The Muon g-2 Experiment recently reported a new measurement of the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon with a precision of 0.46 parts-per-million. This result is in good agreement with the previous experimental measurement from Brookhaven National Laboratory and has increased the tension with the Standard Model calculation to 4.2 standard deviations, strengthening hints of New Physics. This talk will give a brief description of the experimental history and will provide an overview of the measurement challenges and analysis techniques.
Pobierz prezentację / Download the slides
Prof. Dominik Stoeckinger (TU Dresden): Theory predictions and interpretations of the Fermilab g-2 result.
The quantity g-2 of the muon is sensitive to all known elementary particles and all forces between them. In the Standard Model of particle physics a highly precise prediction is possible. The observed deviation from the Standard Model might be due to additional, so far unknown particles or forces. The talk will briefly explain the status of the Standard Model prediction and give an overview of potential implications for physics beyond the Standard Model.
Pobierz prezentację / Download the slides
Pobierz nagranie (brak pierwszych 2 minut) / Download the recording (delayed by 2 mins)
Climate change - which way forward?
Pobierz plakat / Download the poster
Pobierz nagranie / Download the recording
SARS CoV 2 super-spreaders and super-spreading Variant of Concern 202012/01
The novel SARS-CoV-2 Variant of Concern (VOC)-202012/01 (also known as B.1.1.7), first collected on September 20, 2020, in Kent, UK, is a rapidly growing lineage. Based on GISAID we estimated that the replicative advantage of the VOC-202012/01 lineage is in the range of 1.85–2.17 with respect to the 20A.EU1 variant (dominating in England in November 2020) and in the range of 1.99–2.36 with respect to other non-VOC-202012/01 strains. Such significant replicative advantage and the fact that London serves as major international transportation hub suggest that the VOC-202012/01 strain will likely become globally dominant, hindering containment of the COVID-19 epidemics prior to mass vaccinations.
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.200786
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.12.28.20248906
The colloquium will take place via ZOOM. For the parameters, see the October 26, 2020 lecture.
Lectures by the two (ex aequo) laureates of the 2020 Marek Pieńkowski Scientific Prize
The emergence of eukaryotes, cells with organelles such as nucleus and mitochondria or plastids, had a revolutionary impact on the subsequent history of life, leading to the evolution of complex multicellular organisms. I will discuss the endosymbiotic origin of mitochondria and plastids from bacteria, and their subsequent evolution. Finally, I will focus on our discovery of a unicellular organism Monocercomonoides, the first known eukaryote with no mitochondrion. Investigation of Monocercomonoides allowed us to understand how endosymbiosis can be undone and how this affects the cellular complexity.
Pobierz prezentację dr Anny Karnkowskiej / Download the presentation of dr Anna Karnkowska
A three-dimensional map of the Milky Way based on classical Cepheids
We know that the Milky Way is a spiral galaxy, but methods used to describe it in more detail have been indirect and based on various assumptions. This, combined with the fact that we live within the disk and observe it through clouds of gas and dust, makes it very difficult to make a precise map of our Galaxy. However, there is a class of young variable supergiant stars, called classical Cepheids, to which we can measure distances with a great accuracy. I will show how we used a large sample of these stars to create a new, detailed map of the Milky Way in three dimensions, and what they can tell us about the recent history of our Galaxy.
Pobierz prezentację dr Doroty Skowron / Download the presentation of dr Dorota Skowron [.odp]
Pobierz prezentację dr Doroty Skowron / Download the presentation of dr Dorota Skowron [.pdf]
The colloquium will take place via ZOOM. For the parameters, see the October 26, 2020 lecture.
Pobierz plakat / Download the poster
The 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics
Experimentalists Reinhard Genzel and Andrea Ghez have been prized for their observations of the Centre of the Galaxy and for proving the existence of a massive compact object there. Methodology and results of the two groups led by Genzel and Ghez will be presented and consequences and future of such studies will be discussed by dr hab. Łukasz Wyrzykowski from the Astronomical Observatory, Faculty of Physics, University of Warsaw.
The colloquium will take place via ZOOM. For the parameters, see the October 26, 2020 lecture.
Pobierz plakat / Download the poster
Pobierz prezentację prof. Lewandowskiego/ Download the presentation of prof. Lewandowski
Pobierz prezentację dr hab. Wyrzykowskiego/ Download the presentation of dr hab. Wyrzykowski
The search for life as we (do not) know it
Pobierz plakat / Download the poster
Pobierz prezentację / Download the presentation
Pobierz nagranie / Download the recording
The colloquium will take place via ZOOM
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/93881687598?pwd=UmFhVUdVSXhnQ2tIVVozNmowSUNtZz09
Meeting ID: 938 8168 7598
Passcode: prv316.
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