Tidlegare arrangement - Side 234
Lucio Mayer, Institute for Computational Science, University of Zurich
Doctoral candidate Master in Physics Helga Margrete Bodahl Holmestad at the Department of Physics will give a trial lecture on the given topic:
" Einstein's Theory of Relativity""
Doctoral candidate Master in Physics Audun Skaugen at the Department of Physics will give a trial lecture on the given topic:
" Do the Navier-Stokes equations allow for the emergence of singular flow structures in a finite amount of time?"
Exploring the Ca2+ and ROS release in the IDA signalling pathway
Honorary guest and speaker: Holberg Prize Winner and Professor Julia Kristeva, Université Paris Diderot. Key note speakers: Professor Marie Rose Moro, Université Paris Descartes, Professor Brian Hurwitz, King's College London and Professor Trish Greenhalgh, University of Oxford.
Roundtable discussion chaired by Brandy Schillace, Editor-in-chief of BMJ’s Medical Humanities Journal (London). Commentary to Julia Kristeva's lecture by Prof. Rosemarie Garland-Thomson (Emory University).
We will discuss the study of Combs et al. and gain insights into spatial autocorrelation, coancestry and evolutionary clustering analyses as well as invasion in urban landscapes
Talk given by David R. Nelson, Lyman Laboratory, Harvard University.
Noncommutative geometry aims to use geometric insight in studying phenomena that are beyond the reach of classical geometry and analysis, using functional analysis and algebra as primary rigorous tools. Over the years it has been applied to a variety of problems, from index theory for foliations, to the Novikov conjecture, quantum Hall effect, standard model, analysis on quantum groups, and many more. The goal of the one-day seminar is to use the opportunity provided by the visit of Adam Rennie from Australia to report on recent advances in the area. Another goal is to strengthen ties between the operator algebra groups in Oslo and Trondheim.
The seminar is part of the project "Pure Mathematics in Norway, 2018-2022", supported by the Trond Mohn Stiftelse (earlier called Bergen Research Foundation) and the Tromsø Research Foundation.
Høyhastighets sampler for CMOS LIDAR
Human IgG subclasses in intracellular antiviral immunity
Toward a learning culture
Explore how teaching staff, students, educational leaders, administrators and community members can collaborate to foster a learning culture.
30th Nordic Workshop on Programming Theory Oslo, Norway. The conference homepage contains details about topics, important dates and further information.
Valeriya Naumova (Machine Intelligence Department, Simula Research Laboratory) will give a talk on October 23th at 14:15 in the Seminar Room 819, Niels Henrik Abels hus, 8th floor.
”Capillary poly(styrene-co-octadecene-co-divinylbenzene) monolithic trap columns for bioanalytical analysis”
Professor Andrey Pilipenko from the Kiev Polytechnic Institute will give a talk with title "On perturbations of ordinary differential equations with non-Lipschitz coefficients by a small-noise".
Reidun Sirevåg from the Section for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, UiO, will give a talk entitled "From hot springs to crystals. Confessions of a female scientist" at the Evogene seminar 22nd of October.
By Lydia V. Luncz, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Hylleraas seminar, hosted in Oslo
Atmospheric and climate sciences have a stronghold in Oslo among the four institutions University of Oslo, the Meteorological Institute, CICERO and NILU. This joint seminar invites renowned international experts to contribute to an informal series of lectures, meant to create interaction with the Oslo atmospheric and climate science community on recent highlights and analysis in the field. All seminars will be held on Thursdays (Noon -1pm) and lunch (sandwiches) will be served on a “first-come-first-served”-basis.
Lecture by Professor Jerome S. Engel "Innovation in the Digital Age: How does it impact health care and the life sciences?"
The genuine analog of an E_\infty-ring spectrum in algebraic geometry is the notion of a normed motivic spectrum, which carries multiplicative transfers along finite etale morphisms. The homological shadows of an E_\infty-ring structure are the Dyer-Lashof operations which acts on the homology an E_\infty-ring spectrum. We will construct analogs of these operations in motivic homotopy theory, state their basic properties and discuss some consequences such as splitting results for normed motivic spectra. The construction mixes two ingredients: the theory of motivic colimits and equivariant motivic homotopy theory. This is joint work with Tom Bachmann and Jeremiah Heller.
Late Lunch Talk by Kristina Øie Kvile from CEES
The national meeting of the Norwegian Chemical Society will take place October 16-18 2018 at Lillestrøm.
Friday seminar by Robert Serrouya from Alberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute, Edmonton, Canada