Location: BME Institute of Physics, Department of Physics
Budafoki út 8. Building F, lecture hall 213, 2nd floor
Our colloquium series carries the name of one of the greatest Hungarian physicists, Leo Szilárd, enrolled as a student at the Technical University of Budapest in 1916. The goal of our colloquia is to offer interested students and faculty insightful lectures by distinguished lecturers from Hungary and all over the world in the fields of experimental and theoretical physics, engineering, and biophysics.
Program: 2024/25 Fall (tentative)
Sept. 24. |
András Pályi (BME): Quantum computing with single-electron quantum bits |
Oct. 8. |
Gergely T. Zimányi (UC Davis): Adapting academic physics methods to improve solar cell performance from femtoseconds to gigaseconds |
Oct. 22. |
Martino Poggio (Uni. Basel): Magnetic microscopy of 2D and chiral magnetism |
Nov. 12. |
Alioscia Hamma (Uni. Naples): Quantum Complexity and scrambling entropy |
Nov. 26. |
Ferenc Kun (Uni. Debrecen): The role of anisotropy and disorder in shrinkage induced cracking |