NPA Seminar: Stefan Knirck, Harvard
Talk Title: Axion Dark Matter Searches from Radio to Infrared
Talk Title: Axion Dark Matter Searches from Radio to Infrared
Talk Title: “The Electron-Ion Collider as a Potential Pentaquark Factory”
Abstract: The Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) is a groundbreaking facility designed to probe the subatomic world, particularly the structure of nuclear matter and nucleons. This talk highlights the EIC’s potential as a powerful pentaquark factory, offering opportunities not only to measure pentaquarks but to precisely characterize their properties. With its high energy and exceptional spin polarization capabilities, the EIC will open a new chapter in exotic hadron research.
The CCAM Symposium is an annual, interdisciplinary event that investigates the cultural landscape of our time. Acting as a bridge between the discoveries at CCAM and those on campus and beyond, it features discussions, exhibitions, performances, workshops, and more. In 2025, the symposium explores the theme of “illuminations.”
Please join Yale Chemistry for a junior faculty candidate seminar in Physical Chemistry with Jacob Higgins, NRC Postdoctoral Fellow at JILA and University of Colorado Boulder.
Please join Yale Chemistry for a junior faculty candidate seminar with Diptarka Hait, Stanford Science Fellow at Stanford University.
Carl Zimmer, science columnist for the New York Times and adjunct professor of Molecular Biophysics, will present his new book, “Air-Borne: The Hidden History of the Life We Breathe.” He will be in conversation with Brandon Ogbunu, assistant professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the Yale School of Medicine.
Exploring High-Mass Dark Matter Axions: Future Plans at Stockholm University
Date: Friday, December 6th
Time: 3-4:30 pm
Location: GM Room, Horchow Hall, 55 Hillhouse Ave
Speaker: Senior Vice President and Chief Scientist at X-energy, Dr. Eben Mulder
Register here: https://forms.gle/hh9tUf5F3V67qJQeA
In addition to being the first woman to teach at the Sorbonne and the only person ever to have won Nobel Prizes in both physics and chemistry, Marie Curie welcomed other women into her lab. It was her lab from the untimely death of her husband, Pierre, in 1906, till her own death in 1934. She ran it, enlarged it, moved it into the imposing new Radium Institute, and peopled it with an international assembly of scientists, more than forty of whom were women, including her daughter Irène, the second woman to win a Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
Please join Yale Chemistry for a Silliman Seminar in Materials Chemistry with Qian Chen, Professor of Chemistry and Racheff Faculty Scholar, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC).
Title: TBA