05/18/2023
Our guests having fun with shades at the Quantum Network Workshop!
Official page for the Ph.D. Program in Physics at the City University of New York Graduate Center The Ph.D.
Program in Physics provides students with opportunities to pursue original research on the frontiers of physics and requisite training in the fundamentals of physics. Students may choose a research specialization from the principal areas of modern theoretical and experimental physics. The Physics program features specialized research partnerships with some of the most significant research centers
05/18/2023
Our guests having fun with shades at the Quantum Network Workshop!
05/18/2023
Got AQ at the Quantum Networks Workshop 2023 Event!
05/18/2023
Hello Physics community,
The Queens College CUNY Physics department is hosting hte following colloquium by Professor Mengkun Liu on " Imaging Landau Quantized Polaritons Through Nano-light" this May 22nd at 12:15 PM
More details in the poster as well as Zoom access:
Meeting ID 829 2687 2594
passcode 866995 to join
05/10/2023
Hello Everyone,
The Center for Theoretical Physics of Physics Department has the following on line seminar tomorrow at noon.
Here are links to the Zoom as well as more details on the flyer
Join Zoom Meeting
https://liu.zoom.us/j/94407938833?pwd=SjZKcGdJRXlkSWMwT29yRk51RHpTUT09
Meeting ID: 944 0793 8833
Passcode: 1493607
Date: Thursday, May 11, 2023
Time: 12:00 noon -12:55 pm
05/03/2023
Hey Physics Community,
Here's an interesting talk featuring Einstein going on tomorrow.
It is the CUNY City Tech Center for Theoretical Physics seminar 5/4 @ 12 noon - Nicolas Boulanger : Scientific exchanges between Einstein, Weyl and Cartan: The birth of Gauge Theory
See details in the poster.
Hello all!
Information bellow about our new workshop:
Quantum networks, which can transmit quantum information, such as qubits and entanglement, are coming into existence in the US, Europe, and Asia. In fact, a startup here in New York, Qunnect, is currently sending entangled photons through the fiber optic network under New York City.
We will be having a workshop on quantum networks on Thursday, May 4, and Friday, May 5, of this week in the Science Center (room 4102) at the CUNY Graduate Center. Information about the workshop and a schedule can be found here: https://itsatcuny.org/calendar/quantumnetworks . The talks will be live streamed over Zoom at
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84207453253?pwd=eXB5eDdkWHdYY3MydVJ0ZnZPMHFyZz09
Meeting ID: 842 0745 3253
Passcode: 573873
We would like to thank Sandbox AQ and the Simons Foundation for their support of this workshop. Any questions can be directed to Mark Hillery [email protected] .
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03/30/2023
Hello Physics community, here's some info on an upcoming webinar featuring Sanfeng Wu from Princeston University!
See details in the flyer
03/30/2023
Hello Physics community, here is information on our latest talk featuring Ian Moult from Yale University, see details below in the flyer.
03/21/2023
Dear Physics Community
Please see attached for details of CCNY's Mark W. Zemansky Lecture on April 3rd.
City College of New York CUNY Physics Colloquium Wed. Mar. 22 - Prof. Philip S. Lukeman on "Multiscale Polyvalent Biosensing using DNA Nanotechnology & Electrochemistry"
Where? In person in Marshak Science Building, Room 418N and
by Zoom (details below)
Contact Name: Sriram Ganeshan
Contact Phone: 212-650-6085
Titled,
Multiscale Polyvalent Biosensing using DNA Nanotechnology & Electrochemistry
Dr. Philip S. Lukeman
Associate Professor
School of Liberal Arts and Sciences
St. John’s University, Queens, NY
Abstract:
We will describe here the utilization of DNA nanotechnology to construct three different electrochemical biosensor platforms that can:
Be used to detect a wide range of targets (DNA, proteins) by swapping independent, modular analyte binding domains and reporter domains
Detect 100 nm+ scale targets and discriminate intact target vs subunit binding
Utilize electron transfer rate as a measure of polyvalent binding
-----------------------------
Here are the full zoom details.
Join Zoom Meeting
https://ccny.zoom.us/j/85325461143?pwd=RXJaaVd2MCtJOFNqSWt1djh2RjJHdz09
Meeting ID: 853 2546 1143
Passcode: ccny2022
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03/21/2023
Christian Beneš (BC Department of Mathematics) on Thursday, March 23 (Brooklyn College Physics Dept Colloquium)
Brooklyn College Physics Department Colloquium
Thursday, March 23, 2023 from 12:30pm in person and on Zoom (hybrid format)
In person location: Ingersoll Hall, 2130
Zoom registration link: https://tinyurl.com/BC-Benes
Speaker: Prof. Christian Beneš (Department of Mathematics, Brooklyn College)
Title: Conformal Invariance of Lattice Models from Statistical Mechanics
Abstract: Many physical phenomena can be described by discrete random processes or discrete random configurations: Random walks describe molecular movement; the self-avoiding walk was introduced to describe the behavior of polymers; the Ising model is a model for ferromagnetism; percolation models transport in porous media. Rather surprisingly, the last three of these models have scaling limits (obtained by letting the lattice size tend to 0) that belong to a same one-parameter family of conformally invariant random curves, the Schramm-Loewner evolution. This stochastic process introduced in 1999 by Schramm has been at the center of many rigorous breakthroughs in statistical mechanics. This talk will be an overview of some of these.
Welcome! You are invited to join a meeting: Brooklyn College Physics Department Colloquium by Prof. Christian Beneš (Department of Mathematics, Brooklyn College). After registering, you will receive a confirmation email about joining the meeting. Title: Conformal Invariance of Lattice Models from Statistical Mechanics Abstract: Many physical phenomena can be described by discrete random processes or discrete random configurations: Random walks describe molecular movement; the self-avoiding walk was introduced to describe the behavior of poly...
03/21/2023
Engineering Leadership Certificate Program Session 4: Executive in Residence - ChatGPT, LLMs and AI – Opportunities and Ethical Challenges on March 30th at Grover School of Engineering.
See poster below for more details: