Events
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Physics Colloquium – Debnandini Mukherjee
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesDebnandini Mukherjee, PhD Candidate, UWM Department of Physics.
Listening to hte Universe with Gravitational Waves!
Gravitational waves were observed for the first time on September 14, 2015. A 36 and a 29 M⊙ black holes were seen to inspiral around each other and merge about ∼ 410 Mpc away. This gave momentum to the areas of gravitational wave astrophysics and astronomy. While the universe could be perceived in the electromagnetic spectrum so far, enabling us to ”see” it with telescopes, it could now be ”listened to” using gravitational waves.
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Physics Colloquium – Dr. Allison Doerr
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesAllison Doerr, Senior Editor for Nature Methods.
Getting Published in High-Impact Journals: A Perspective from a Nature Methods Editor
A major goal of most scientific researchers is obtaining exciting results and publishing them in high-visibility, well-regarded journals. As a Senior Editor at Nature Methods with 13 years of experience, I will take you inside the editorial world to describe how we select, review, improve, and disseminate important research to a broad scientific community.
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Physics Colloquium – Hong Qi
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesHong Qi, PhD Candidate, UWM Department of Physics.
Studies in Gravitational-wave Astronomy & Tests of General RelativityModern astronomical data sets provide the opportunity to test our physical theories of the Universe at unprecedented levels of accuracy. This dissertation examines approaches to testing gravitational theories using a) observations of stars orbiting the center of the Milky Way; b) observations of the pulsations of Cepheid variable stars in dwarf galaxies; and c) gravitational-wave observations of compact binary mergers.
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Biophysics Talk – Professor Abhishek Singharoy
KIRC KEN 2175 3135 N. Maryland Ave., MilwaukeeAbhishek Singharoy, Assistant Professor, Center for Applied Structural Discovery, Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University.
Computing Free-Energy Landscapes from Molecular Dynamics Simulations
The most probable pathways of structural transition in biomolecular complexes follow minimum free-energy pathways. Employing an implicit scheme for solving the Langevin dynamics equation, called the string method, these pathways are determined for structural transitions in molecular motors. The underlying multidimensional thermodynamic landscape is probed to determine experimentally measurable quantities such as, binding affinity, turnover rates, and energy conversion efficiencies.
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No Physics Colloquium
There is no Physics colloquium scheduled for this week.
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Physics Colloquium – Kevin M. Koch
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesKevin M. Koch, PhD - Medical College of Wisconsin and MCW/MU
Physics as Applied to Transitional MRI Research at the Medical College of Wisconsin
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Physics Colloquium – Open
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesThere is no speaker currently scheduled for this week.
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No Physics Colloquium
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesThere is no speaker currently scheduled for this week.
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Physics Colloquium – Open
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesThere is no speaker currently scheduled for this week.
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Physics Colloquium – Samindranath (Sami) Mitra, PhD
Lapham 160 3209 N. Maryland Ave., Milwaukee, WI, United StatesSami Mitra, PhD -- Editor, Physical Review Letters (APS)
Physics after the lab & the desk: Your work in PRL
In a talk structured to encourage interspersed Q and A, I will discuss the dissemination of your physics results that follows the lab, the keyboard, and the desk.