Pages

October 01, 2009

  • Date:01TuesdayFebruary 2011

    Ode To Memory A mini-series devoted to memory in cenema

    More information
    Time
    14:00 - 14:00
    Location
    Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
    LecturerProf. Yadin Dudai
    Dept of Neurobiology, WIS
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:01TuesdayFebruary 2011

    Extremal spectral properties of Lawson tau-surfaces and the Lame equation

    More information
    Time
    16:00 - 16:00
    Location
    Jacob Ziskind Building
    LecturerAlexei V. Penskoi
    Moscow State University Independent University of Moscow
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
    Lecture
  • Date:02WednesdayFebruary 2011

    Active role of the environment in shaping the developmental program

    More information
    Time
    10:00 - 10:00
    Title
    Developmental Club
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Yoav Soen
    Dept. of Biological Chemistry
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:02WednesdayFebruary 2011

    “Structure and dynamics of out of equilibrium systems: glass and granular matter.”

    More information
    Time
    10:00 - 10:00
    Title
    Ph.D. student lecture
    LecturerNataliya Makedonska
    Environmental Sciences and Energy Research Dept. Weizmann Institute of Science
    Organizer
    Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:02WednesdayFebruary 2011

    Bosonization out of equilibrium

    More information
    Time
    13:15 - 13:15
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerProf. Yuval Gefen
    Organizer
    Department of Condensed Matter Physics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about One of the most efficient ways to treat interacting many-bod...»
    One of the most efficient ways to treat interacting many-body systems in one-dimension is to

    express its low-lying dynamics as excitations of a bosonic field. The paradigm is that bosonizing interacting electrons,

    described in terms of Luttinger liquids, leads to a quadratic Hamiltonian which can be solved exactly.

    When the many-body system is driven out of equilibrium, bosonization will give rise to a quadratic

    bosonic Hamiltonian, but the ensuing action will not be quadratic—the paradigm is broken. What can be done

    then? I will describe how the problem ( a large class of out-of-equilibrium systems) is essentially solved , and how the underlying physics is connected

    to concepts at the core of quantum solid state: Fermi edge singularity, counting statistics, electron fractionalization etc.

    Lecture
  • Date:02WednesdayFebruary 2011

    Cinema club: "A Brand New Life"

    More information
    Time
    19:00 - 21:00
    Location
    Wolfson Building for Biological Research
    Homepage
    Contact
    Cultural Events
  • Date:03ThursdayFebruary 2011

    Magnetic Resonance Seminar

    More information
    Time
    09:00 - 10:00
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerMichal Gross
    Organizer
    Department of Chemical and Biological Physics
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:03ThursdayFebruary 2011

    From Diffusion Limited Aggregation to the Brownian Web via Conformal Mappings

    More information
    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Ziskind Bldg.
    LecturerTom Ellis
    University of Cambridge
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
    Lecture
  • Date:03ThursdayFebruary 2011

    Antihydrogen trapping

    More information
    Time
    11:15 - 11:15
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerEli Sarid
    NRCN, Israel and the ALPHA collaboration, CERN
    Organizer
    Faculty of Physics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Trapping antihydrogen has been a long standing goal in antim...»
    Trapping antihydrogen has been a long standing goal in antimatter research. Such trapping has been recently achieved by the ALPHA collaboration at CERN(1). The antihydrogen atoms were trapped in a minimum-B trap through the interaction between an inhomogeneous magnetic field (octupole and mirrors) and the magnetic moment of the neutral atoms. As such traps are very shallow (less than 1K), a special challenge was to cool down the constituents of the atoms- the antiproton and the positron plasmas, and to keep them from heating during the manipulations leading to the production of the antihydrogen atoms. Among the techniques used were evaporative cooling of the positrons to about 40K and autoresonance excitation(2) of the antiprorons in order to bring them to overlap the positron cloud. In the talk I will describe the key techniques that made the latest achievement possible, and the observations that led to the demonstration of successful trapping of the antihydrogen atoms. This result opens the door to the development of spectroscopic measurements on anti-atoms that will eventually allow precision tests of CPT symmetry.

    *This work is supported by the ISF, Israel.

    (1) "Trapped antihydrogen", G.B. Andersen et. al, , ALPHA collaboration, Nature 468, 673–676, 2 December 2010, published online 17 November 2010.
    (2) “Autoresonant Transition in the Presence of Noise and Self-Fields”,
    I. Barth, L. Friedland, E. Sarid and A. G. Shagalov, Phys. Rev. Lett 103, 155001 (2009).



    Colloquia
  • Date:03ThursdayFebruary 2011

    Face to Face, Brain to Brain: Exploring the Mechanisms of Dyadic Social Interactions

    More information
    Time
    12:00 - 12:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Uri Hasson
    Dept of Psychology Princeton University
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Cognitive neuroscience experiments typically isolate human o...»
    Cognitive neuroscience experiments typically isolate human or animal subjects from their natural environment by placing them in a sealed quiet room where interactions occur solely with a computer screen. In everyday life, however, we spend most of our time interacting with other individuals. Using fMRI, we recently recorded the brain activity of a speaker telling an unrehearsed real-life story and the brain activity of a listener listening to a recording of the story. To make the study as ecological as possible, we instructed the speaker to speak as if telling the story to a friend. Next, we measured the brain activity of a listener hearing the recorded audio of the spoken story, thereby capturing the time-locked neural dynamics from both sides of the communication. Finally, we asked the listeners to complete a detailed questionnaire that assessed their level of comprehension. Our results indicate that during successful communication the speaker’s and listener’s brains exhibit joint, temporally coupled, response patterns. Such neural coupling substantially diminishes in the absence of communication, for instance, when listening to an unintelligible foreign language. In addition, more extensive speaker–listener neural couplings result in more successful communication. The speaker-listener neural coupling exposes a shared neural substrate that exhibits temporally aligned response patterns across communicators. The recording of the neural responses from both the speaker brain and the listener brain opens a new window into the neural basis of interpersonal communication, and may be used to assess verbal and non-verbal forms of interaction in both human and other model systems.
    Lecture
  • Date:03ThursdayFebruary 2011

    Plant Sciences Special Seminar

    More information
    Time
    15:00 - 15:00
    Location
    Ullmann Building of Life Sciences
    LecturerProf. Jean-Marc Neuhaus
    L'Université de Neuchâtel, Switzerland
    Organizer
    Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about "Biogenesis of vacuoles" ...»
    "Biogenesis of vacuoles"
    Lecture
  • Date:03ThursdayFebruary 2011

    Children's Theater - “Rinat in our Yard”

    More information
    Time
    17:30 - 17:30
    Title
    With Rinat Gabai and others
    Location
    Michael Sela Auditorium
    Contact
    Cultural Events
  • Date:06SundayFebruary 2011

    Review of research conducted by speakers

    More information
    Time
    12:30 - 14:00
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerGabor Kupi, Dr. Nir Sapir
    Organizer
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Center for Astrophysics
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:06SundayFebruary 2011

    Possible modulation of the tumor suppressor Hippo pathway by the Src proto-oncoprotein

    More information
    Time
    13:00 - 13:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerMatan Shanzer
    Yosef Shaul's group, Dept. of Molecular Genetics, WIS
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Genetics
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:07MondayFebruary 201110ThursdayFebruary 2011

    6th ILANIT Congress

    More information
    Time
    All day
    Location
    off campus
    Chairperson
    Prof. Eitan Bibi
    Homepage
    Contact
    Conference
  • Date:07MondayFebruary 2011

    Faculty of Chemistry Colloquium- Prof. Yitzhak Apeloig

    More information
    Time
    11:00 - 12:30
    Title
    LOW-COORDINATION SILICON COMPOUNDS. MULTIPLE BONDS, METALLOSILANES (SILYL ANOINS) AND SILYL RADICALS
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerProf. Yitzhak Apeloig
    Technion Chair in Chemistry
    Organizer
    Faculty of Chemistry
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:07MondayFebruary 2011

    W-algebras, Harish-Chandra modules and character D-modules

    More information
    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Ziskind Bldg.
    LecturerRoman Bezrukavnikov
    M.I.T.
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
    Lecture
  • Date:07MondayFebruary 2011

    Geometry of quantum response in open systems

    More information
    Time
    14:15 - 14:15
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerYossi Avron, Technion
    Organizer
    Department of Physics of Complex Systems
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about I shall describe a theory of adiabatic response for open sys...»
    I shall describe a theory of adiabatic response for open systems governed by Lindblad evolutions. The theory gives quantum response a geometric interpretation induced from the geometry of Hilbert space. For a two level system the metric turns out to be the Fubini-Study metric and the symplectic form the adiabatic curvature. Nice things happen when the metric and symplectic structures are {em compatible}. I shall give examples of compatible physical systems. Based on joint work with Fraas, Graf and Kenneth.

    Lecture
  • Date:07MondayFebruary 2011

    A geometric Lovasz Local Lemma and applications to quantum SAT

    More information
    Time
    14:30 - 14:30
    Location
    Ziskind Bldg.
    LecturerJulia Kempe
    Tel Aviv University and University of Paris
    Organizer
    Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
    Lecture
  • Date:07MondayFebruary 2011

    סדרת מפגשים בסוגיות ביואתיות

    More information
    Time
    19:00 - 19:00
    Title
    סדרת הרצאות לזכר חנן בר־און
    Organizer
    Science for All Unit
    Contact
    Lecture

Pages