Previous events - Page 39
Title: Offshore wind: Is power production limited by the atmospheric energy input?
Speaker: Ole Anders Nøst, Oceanbox
This week we discuss Gudmunds et al on TREE.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169534722001689?via%3Dihub
[new] Time and place: Jun 8th, 2023 12 PM – 1 PM, Greenhouse, 3215
Welcome to our weekly lunch seminar held in the dScience lounge area! This event is open to PhD candidates and postdocs.
"Cosmological parameter estimation methods for modern end-to-end analysis"
Optical Remote Sensing of Glacier Surges in Svalbard
Constrained folding dynamics: a generalized model for labyrinth pattern development
Tomás Gonzalo, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Weekly Theory Seminar.
An Extended Fully-Implicit Hybrid Model for Geological CO2 Storage
Translational regulation by a 4E-binding protein paradigm
"Exploring the cold and dense circumgalactic medium of BX610"
This is a half-day online workshop on PDEs in physical systems. Abstracts and Zoom link can be found here!
This course prepares PhD candidates and early career researchers within biotechnology, life science and neighbouring scientific fields to adopt Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) in their research practice.
This talk will focus on recent work about the sequential detection of anomalies within partially observed functional data, motivated by a problem encountered by an industrial collaborator. Classical sequential changepoint detection approaches look for changes in the parameters, or structure, of a data sequence and are not equipped to handle the complex non-stationarity and dependency structure of functional data. Conversely, existing functional data approaches require the full observation of the curve before anomaly detection can take place. We propose a new method, FAST, that performs sequential detection of anomalies in partially observed functional data. This talk will introduce the approach, and some associated theoretical results, and highlight its application on telecommunications data.
This is joint work with Idris Eckley and Lawrence Bardwell.
Late Lunch Talk by Emily Enevoldsen
Welcome to seminar by Omer Faruk Kuzu (Researcher, Saatcioglu Group, BMB, IBV).
Dr. Boris Lenhard, Professor of Computational Biology at the MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences and Imperial College London, UK, will present his research on "Promoter architectures and responsiveness to enhancers in long-range developmental regulation."
Shedding light on the extent and patterns of spurdog (Squalus acanthias) bycatch in the Norwegian coastal fisheries
Deployment of semi-unsupervised learning in the search for new physics at the LHC with the ATLAS detector
I will show you who are the members of the Physics Education research group of the University of Bologna. Moreover, I will tell you about the projects in which we are involved now and all the past significnt projects that have helped to strengthen the direction and current identity of the group. Also I will indicate what are the main publications that have been made in these years.
All this will be done through the eyes and the narrative of a PhD student part of UNIBO research group. I have not certainly the presumption to know exactly (after two years) how to orient myself in all the rich and multi-dimensional research activities of my group. But I will try to make you perceive the great commitment, thoughts and enthusiasm that I see every day in the challenging but wonderful research activity in Bologna.
Application of Supervised Machine Learning to the Search for New Physics in ATLAS data
"Searching for stellar emission in the sub-THz bands"
Changes in firn properties and meltwater retention on Austfonna ice cap, Svalbard, based on observations and model simulations
Mapping fish diversity in the Oslo fjord by combining eDNA and citizen science
The Numerical Methods in Quantum Chemistry workshop will take place June 5-8 2023 in Tromsø.