Kolloquien

Physikalisches Kolloquium

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URL to ICS calendar of this seminar

Kirchhoff-Institut für Physik, Otto-Haxel-Hörsaal
Friday 17:15

9.10.2025 17:30
INF 308, HS 1
Kolloquium der 55. Heidelberger Graduiertentage - Hans Jensen Invited Lecture
17.10.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Klaus Blaum, Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Heidelberg
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
The four fundamental interactions and their symmetries, along with the fundamental constants and properties of elementary particles - such as masses and magnetic moments - form the foundational structure of the universe and underpin the well-tested Standard Model (SM) of particle physics. Conducting stringent tests of these interactions and symmetries under extreme conditions, at low energies and with the highest precision, for example by comparing particles and their counterparts, the antiparticles, allows us to probe for potential physics beyond the SM. Advancing these tests beyond their current limits requires the development of innovative experimental techniques.   more...
24.10.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Thomas Leisner, Institut für Umweltphysik, Universität Heidelberg
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
Aerosols are small airborne particles that are surrounding us but are mostly invisible to our eyes. Multiple natural and anthropogenic emission sources lead to various chemical compositions of aerosols in the Earth's atmosphere. Influences of aerosols on radiative transfer and cloud microphysical processes are qualitatively understood, but the magnitudes of these effects are under debate with important implication for understanding past and future climate change. In this colloquium, I will give a glimpse on aerosol effects on climate, explain some reasons for uncertainties in our understanding of their effects on climate, and outline how we can make progress despite persistent model uncertainty.   more...
31.10.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Timo Weigand, Universität Hamburg
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
Gravity remains, to date, the most mysterious of the four known fundamental interactions. The quest for a consistent theory of quantum gravity is believed to be deeply intertwined with some of the most pressing outstanding open questions in high energy physics and cosmology. In this colloquium we will review some recent proposals for universal constraints which every effective field theory must obey if it arises as the low-energy limit of a consistent quantum gravity theory. A particularly fruitful point of departure is the study of quantum gravity theories near asymptotic weak coupling.   more...
7.11.2025 17:00
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
Most of the rain we experience forms not as liquid water, but as ice. In mid-latitude clouds, ice formation is a prerequisite for precipitation, but at temperatures warmer than -36?oC, water droplets can only freeze heterogeneously with the help of particles called ice-nucleating particles (INPs). These INPs are very rare among atmospheric aerosols, and we still don’t fully understand what makes one particle a more effective INP than another.   more...
14.11.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Thomas Klinger, Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik, Garching
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
21.11.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Lauriane Chomaz, Physikalisches Institut, Universität Heidelberg
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
28.11.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Marta Volenteri, Institut d'Astrophysique, Paris
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
The presence of massive black holes in the first galaxies has been predicted theoretically for many years. Until the launch of the space telescope JWST the bulk of observational data hinged on very bright sources 'luminous quasars' detected about one billion years after the Big Bang. Now a large number of fainter sources, candidate active massive black holes, have been identified, some at much earlier cosmic times.   more...
5.12.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Julian Schmitt, Kirchhoff-Institut für Physik, Universität Heidelberg
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
12.12.2025 17:00
Prof. Shahal Ilani, Faculty of Physics, Weizmann Institute of Physics
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
19.12.2025 17:00
Prof. Dr. Gerhard Widmer, Institut für Computational Perception, Universität Linz
INF 308, Hörsaal 1
Weihnachtskolloquium
The field of AI & Music has come a long way, from early attempts at algorithmic composition to a wide variety of intelligent sound and music technologies that are shaping today's digital music world. As in many other application domains, many of the recent successes are based on exploiting and adapting the latest advances in statistical machine learning, transferring them from fields like computer vision and language processing.   more...
9.1.2026 17:00
Dr. Antoine Browaeys, Institut d'Optique, Université Paris Saclay
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
16.1.2026 17:00
Dr. Myriam Benisty, Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Heidelberg
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
23.1.2026 17:00
Dr. François Charton, Axiom Math und Ecole des Ponts, Paris.
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1
30.1.2026 17:00
Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Eberhard Bodenschatz, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization (MPIDS), Göttingen
KIP, INF 227, Hörsaal 1