Oxford Physics Public Lectures
A podcast by Oxford University
101 Episodio
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Superconductors: why it’s cool to be repulsive
Pubblicato: 25/10/2017 -
Cassini-Huygens: Space Odyssey to Saturn and Titan
Pubblicato: 18/10/2017 -
Observation of the mergers of binary black holes: The opening of gravitational wave astronomy
Pubblicato: 27/06/2017 -
Ghost Imaging with Quantum Light
Pubblicato: 27/06/2017 -
Pulsars and Extreme Physics - A 50th Anniversary
Pubblicato: 27/06/2017 -
Starquakes Expose Stellar Heartbeats
Pubblicato: 27/06/2017 -
Curiosity’s Search for Ancient Habitable Environments at Gale Crater, Mars
Pubblicato: 27/04/2017 -
Spatio-temporal Optical Vortices
Pubblicato: 27/04/2017 -
Learning new physics from a medieval thinker: Big Bangs and Rainbows
Pubblicato: 27/04/2017 -
The applied side of Bell nonlocality
Pubblicato: 27/04/2017 -
The Beauty of Flavour - Latest results from the LHCb experiment at the Large Hadron Collider
Pubblicato: 05/04/2017 -
From Materials to Cosmology: Studying the early universe under the microscope
Pubblicato: 05/04/2017 -
The Future of Particle Physics Panel Discussion
Pubblicato: 07/03/2017 -
The Future of Particle Physics: The Particle Physics Christmas Lecture
Pubblicato: 07/03/2017 -
Astronomy at the Highest Energies: Exploring the Extreme Universe with Gamma Rays
Pubblicato: 30/11/2016 -
Exotic combinations of quarks - A journey of fifty years
Pubblicato: 17/11/2016 -
Our Simple but Strange Universe
Pubblicato: 17/11/2016 -
Searching for - and finding! Gravitational Waves
Pubblicato: 01/11/2016 -
Visualizing Quantum Matter
Pubblicato: 01/11/2016 -
Atmospheric Circulation and Climate Change
Pubblicato: 01/11/2016
The Department of Physics public lecture series. An exciting series of lectures about the research at Oxford Physics take place throughout the academic year. Looking at topics diverse as the creation of the universe to the science of climate change. Features episodes previously published as: (1) 'Oxford Physics Alumni': "Informal interviews with physics alumni at events, lectures and other alumni related activities." (2) 'Physics and Philosophy: Arguments, Experiments and a Few Things in Between': "A series which explores some of the links between physics and philosophy, two of the most fundamental ways with which we try to answer our questions about the world around us. A number of the most pertinent topics which bridge the disciplines are discussed - the nature of space and time, the unpredictable results of quantum mechanics and their surprising consequences and perhaps most fundamentally, the nature of the mind and how far science can go towards explaining and understanding it. Featuring interviews with Dr. Christopher Palmer, Prof. Frank Arntzenius, Prof. Vlatko Vedral, Dr. David Wallace and Prof. Roger Penrose."
