Aktuelle Veranstaltung für 25 Apr 2024

Prof. Dr. Ralf Röhlsberger, DESY, Hamburg

Using the high-intensity radiation of the European X-ray Free-Electron Laser, we recently succeeded to excite the sharpest atomic transition in the hard X-ray range, the 12.4 keV nuclear resonance of the stable isotope Scandium-45 [1]. With its extremely narrow natural linewidth of 1.4 femto-eV, it opens not only new possibilities for the development of a nuclear clock, but also for research linked to the foundations of physics, such as time variations of the fundamental constants, the search for dark matter as well as probing the foundations of relativity theory. Furthermore, our experiment demonstrates the great potential of self-seeding X-ray lasers with high pulse rates as a promising platform for the spectroscopy of extremely narrow-band nuclear resonances. The next steps towards a nuclear clock based on Scandium-45 require a further increase of the spectral photon flux using improved X-ray laser sources at 12.4 keV and the development of frequency combs reaching up to this energy. [1] Yuri Shvyd’ko et al., Nature 622, 471 (2023)

Seminar über Quanten-, Atom- und Neutronenphysik (QUANTUM)

14 Uhr c.t., IPH Lorentzraum 05-127


Wochenübersicht für die Woche 22 Apr 2024 bis 28 Apr 2024 (KW 17)

22 Apr 2024

Seminar about Experimental Particle and Astroparticle Physics (ETAP)

Institut für Physik

12:30 Uhr s.t., Staudingerweg 7, Minkowskiraum

Annika Stein, Institut für Physik
Novel Jet Flavour Tagging Algorithms exploiting Adversarial Deep Learning Techniques
at https://indico.him.uni-mainz.de/event/199/

23 Apr 2024

Theorie-Palaver

Institut für Physik

14:00 Uhr s.t., Lorentz room (Staudingerweg 7, 5th floor)

Yann Gouttenoire, Tel Aviv U.
Cosmological first-order phase transitions are said to be strongly supercooled when the nucleation temperature is much smaller than the critical temperature. The phase transition takes place slowly and the probability distribution of bubble nucleation times is maximally spread. Hubble patches which get percolated later than the average are hotter than the background after reheating and potentially collapse into primordial black holes (PBHs). I will give a review of this PBHs formation mechanism and of its most recent developments.

24 Apr 2024

PRISMA+ Colloquium

Institut für Physik

13:00 Uhr s.t., Lorentz-Raum, 05-127, Staudingerweg 7

Prof. Dr. Bastian Märkisch, TU München
Neutron Beta Decay with Perkeo III and Perc

zukünftige Termine
26 Apr 2024

Seminar über die Physik der kondensierten Materie (SFB/TRR173 Spin+X und SFB/TR288 Kolloquium, TopDyn-Seminar)

JGU

12:00 Uhr s.t., Media Room

Kilian Leutner and Thomas Winkler, JGU Mainz
This Friday, the 26th, from 12 to 2 pm, Kilian Leutner and Thomas Winkler will give a test run of the "Intermag 2024 Hands-on session: AI in magnetism." We will give an introductory talk (~30 minutes) about AI in magnetism and more concrete information about our recent project: "AI-accelerated detection of spin structures in Kerr-microscopy data." Afterward, we will ask you to open your laptops and participate actively in the AI revolution. We will guide you through our repository. The goal is that participants can infer data and even train models on their own at the end of the session. If you are interested, feel free to have a look at our paper and official repository: Paper: Labrie-Boulay et al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 21, 014014 (2024): https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.21.014014 Repository (v2.0): Winkler et al., Zenodo repository: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10997175 If you would like to join, please send an email to Kilian Leutner ( kileutne@students.uni-mainz.de ) by Thursday. Kilian Leutner will eventually send around links for a smaller data repository, install instructions this week for the session. You can participate in this session at the Physics building in Mainz in the “Medienraum” (03-431), or you can access the session via Teams using the following link: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MTRhNjI4ZWYtNDkyMC00YzQ1LWIyNzgtMzkxNjAzYjNjYjY2%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%2251aa2b30-c9fa-40db-b91a-3a53a8a08d85%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22e50b859d-212d-4ce0-b8ca-82e26bd02e43%22%7d . (As this is a test talk, we are also happy about some feedback)

Seminar über die Physik der kondensierten Materie (SFB/TRR173 Spin+X und SFB/TR288 Kolloquium, TopDyn-Seminar)

JGU

12:00 Uhr s.t., Media Room

Kilian Leutner and Thomas Winkler, JGU Mainz
This Friday, the 26th, from 12 to 2 pm, Kilian Leutner and Thomas Winkler will give a test run of the "Intermag 2024 Hands-on session: AI in magnetism." We will give an introductory talk (~30 minutes) about AI in magnetism and more concrete information about our recent project: "AI-accelerated detection of spin structures in Kerr-microscopy data." Afterward, we will ask you to open your laptops and participate actively in the AI revolution. We will guide you through our repository. The goal is that participants can infer data and even train models on their own at the end of the session. If you are interested, feel free to have a look at our paper and official repository: Paper: Labrie-Boulay et al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 21, 014014 (2024): https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.21.014014 Repository (v2.0): Winkler et al., Zenodo repository: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10997175 If you would like to join, please send an email to Kilian Leutner ( kileutne@students.uni-mainz.de ) by Thursday. Kilian Leutner will eventually send around links for a smaller data repository, install instructions this week for the session. You can participate in this session at the Physics building in Mainz in the “Medienraum” (03-431), or you can access the session via Teams using the following link: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MTRhNjI4ZWYtNDkyMC00YzQ1LWIyNzgtMzkxNjAzYjNjYjY2%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%2251aa2b30-c9fa-40db-b91a-3a53a8a08d85%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22e50b859d-212d-4ce0-b8ca-82e26bd02e43%22%7d . (As this is a test talk, we are also happy about some feedback)

Zum Physikalischen Kolloquium Mainz


Liste der laufenden Seminare und Kolloquien

Veranstaltungstitel Termin und Ort Koordinator
Institutsseminar Kern- und Hadronenphysik Montags, 1415 Uhr, HS Kernphysik, Becherweg 45 Prof. Dr. Michael Ostrick
Seminar Festkörper- und Grenzflächenphysik Dienstags, 1200 Uhr, Newton-Raum, Staudingerweg 9, 1. Stock, Raum 122 (Nebengebaeude) Prof. Dr. Hans-Joachim Elmers
Seminar über Theorie der Kondensierten Materie/
Weiche Materie und Statistische Physik
Freitags, 1030 Uhr, Newton-Raum (LG 01-122) Dr. Giovanni Settanni
Theory of Condensed Matter: Hard Condensed Matter Tuesday, 1000 Uhr, Seminarraum K Prof. Dr. Jairo Sinova
Theorie Palaver Dienstags, 1430 Uhr, Lorentz-Raum (05-127) Lisa Zeune
Physikalisches Kolloquium Mainz Dienstags, 1615 Uhr, HS Kernphysik, Becherweg 45 Prof. Dr. Uwe Oberlack, Prof. Dr. Achim Denig
PRISMA Colloquium Mittwochs, 1300 Uhr, Lorentz-Raum (05-127) Prof. Dr. Tobias Hurth
Quantengravitation-Seminar Donnerstags, Sozialraum der THEP; Institut fuer Physik (05-427). Prof. Dr. M. Reuter
Theoriekolloquium Donnerstags, 1600 Uhr, Newton-Raum (LG 01-122). Prof. Dr. P.G.J. van Dongen
QUANTUM-Seminar Donnerstags, 1415, Lorentz-Raum (05-127)

Dr. von der Wense,
Prof. van der Loock

Seminar experimentelle Physik der kondensierten Materie Donnerstags, 1400, Minkowski-Raum, 05-119, Staudingerweg 7 Prof. Dr. M. Kläui
Seminar zu Themen in der Collider-Physik Freitags, 1230, Sozialraum ThEP (05-427) Prof. Dr. M. Neubert
MAINZ lecture series Mittwochs, 915, Staudingerweg 9, 3. Stock, Raum 122 Dr. M. Weides
Excellence@WORK XXXXX,XXXX Katrin Klauer
Seminar about Experimental Particle and Astroparticle Physics (ETAP) Montags, 1215, Staudingerweg 7, 5. Stock, Minkowski-Raum 119 Dr. DB. Ta

Weitere Veranstaltungen

Quantum Sonderseminar Seminarraum Quantum (02-427) Prof. Dr. Ferdinand Schmidt-Kaler

Beteiligte Einrichtungen: Institut für Physik,
Institut für Kernphysik,
Institut für Physik der Atmosphäre
Max-Planck-Institut für Polymerforschung, Max-Planck-Institut für Chemie
Technische Wartung: ducbao.ta (klammeraffe) uni-mainz.de