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Colloquia and Research Seminars

Departmental Colloquia are research talks pitched at the wider physics and astronomy audience (including final year undergraduates). During the eleven weeks of the semester there are three colloquia (nominally one astronomy based, one physics based and one PER based). The research seminars are aimed at postgraduate level and above (two seminars each week - one physics and one astronomy).

Arrangements for the Colloquia are split between the coordinator of the Physics Seminars (Dr Bo Hou) and the Astronomy Seminars coordinator (Dr Orsolya Feher). Please contribute to the seminar programme, instructions are available on the PHYSX Wiki.

[Physics seminar zoom link] [PER seminar registration]

The recordings of previous seminars are avaialabe in the following links. [Physics seminars] [Astro seminars] [PER seminars]
[Xiamen-Cardiff seminars]

Schedule from 30 December 2024      (Show earlier schedule)

DateTimeVenueSeriesDetails
Wednesday
22/01/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarInteractions among binary black holes in star clusters
Daniel Marin Pina (ICCUB)
Wednesday
05/02/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarPredicting the structure, fate and impact of massive stars
Raphael Hirschi (Keele University)
Wednesday
12/02/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarThe Peculiarities of the Massive Early-Type Strong-Lens Galaxy ESO286-G022
Adriano Poci (University of Oxford)
Wednesday
12/02/2025
15:00N3.28/ZoomPhysics SeminarsTuning the Infrared Emission of Multilayer Graphene
Yufeng Zhang (Xiamen University)
Wednesday
19/02/2025
16:00N3.28Astro SeminarStar power: insights into galaxy structure and evolution from resolved stellar kinematics.
Amelia Fraser-McKelvie (ESO, Garching)
Wednesday
19/02/2025
12:00N1.32 on the 19th and WX3.07 on the 20th Physics SeminarsBremen-Cardiff alliance Semiconductor Physics Workshop
Prof. Jens Falta and Prof.Wolfgang Langbein (Bremen and Cardiff Universities)
Wednesday
26/02/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarBinary and multiple star formation: how do stars get their spin?
Rajika Kuruwita (Heidelberg Institute)
Wednesday
12/03/2025
11:00N3.23Astro SeminarCore-Collapse Supernovae: Connecting Models and Observations in 3D
Hans-Thomas Janka (Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Garching)
Wednesday
19/03/2025
13:00N3.28Astro SeminarSome unlikely Supermassive Black Hole Background illuminators, and new tests of General Relativity
Padelis Papadopoulos (Aristotle Uni of Thessaloniki)
Wednesday
09/04/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarMassive Star Wars: The earliest stages of high-mass star formation
Andy Rigby (Leeds)
Wednesday
07/05/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarJust the Tip of the Iceberg—Using Extreme Gravitational-Wave Events to Decipher the Origin of Compact Object Mergers
Jakob Stegmann (MPIA Garching)
Wednesday
14/05/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarOrbital eccentricity in low-mass compact binaries
Patricia Schmidt (Birmingham)
Wednesday
14/05/2025
15:00N3.28/TeamsPhysics SeminarsDisorder in Nanophotonics: A Double-Edged Sword
Changxu Liu (University of Exeter)
Wednesday
21/05/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarGravitational Phase-Space Turbulence of Cold Dark Matter
Yonadav Barry Ginat (Oxford)
Thursday
22/05/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarDecolonising Astronomy: Why It Matters
Thilina Heenatigala & Pedro Russo (Earth Life Science Institute, Japan & Leiden Observatory/Ciência Viva, Portugal)
Wednesday
28/05/2025
14:00N3.28Astro Seminar3D Mapping the Galactic magnetic field with stellar polarimetry
Gina Panopoulou (Chalmers (remote))
Wednesday
11/06/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarSupernova and the dust budget
Nina Sanches Sartorio (University of Ghent)
Wednesday
18/06/2025
14:00N3.28Astro SeminarIlluminating Galaxy Nuclei with Tidal Disruption Events
Decker French (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)