Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma

A podcast by Oxford University

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92 Episodes

  1. Entropy: two short stories

    Published: 12/3/2018
  2. Entropy: Gaining Knowledge by Admitting Ignorance

    Published: 12/3/2018
  3. Networked Quantum Information Technologies

    Published: 7/6/2018
  4. Quantum logic with trapped-ion qubits

    Published: 7/6/2018
  5. The ultimate limits of privacy and randomness...for the paranoid ones

    Published: 7/6/2018
  6. “Open” Quantum Systems

    Published: 7/6/2018
  7. Quantum Systems from Group up

    Published: 7/6/2018
  8. Galaxy Dynamics: The chemical evolution side

    Published: 1/25/2018
  9. Galaxy Dynamics: The dynamics of galaxy discs

    Published: 1/25/2018
  10. Galaxy Dynamics: Stellar systems: a new state of matter

    Published: 1/25/2018
  11. Superfluids in Flatland: Topology, Defects, and the 2016 Nobel Prize

    Published: 11/3/2017
  12. Quantum mechanics on the human scale

    Published: 11/3/2017
  13. From Identical Particles to Frictionless Flow

    Published: 11/3/2017
  14. Exploring the very early universe with gravitational waves

    Published: 5/10/2017
  15. The birth of gravitational wave astronomy

    Published: 5/10/2017
  16. From action at a distance to gravitational waves

    Published: 5/10/2017
  17. Kilometres: Turbulence - Morning of Theroetical Physics

    Published: 2/28/2017
  18. Microns: The bacterial viewpoint - Morning of Theroetical Physics

    Published: 2/28/2017
  19. Centimetres: Fluids all around us - Morning of Theroetical Physics

    Published: 2/28/2017
  20. Topology and the Classification of Matter: New Physics Hidden in Plain Sight

    Published: 11/1/2016

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Learn about quantum mechanics, black holes, dark matter, plasma, particle accelerators, the Large Hadron Collider and other key Theoretical Physics topics. The Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics holds morning sessions consisting of three talks, pitched to explain an area of our research to an audience familiar with physics at about second-year undergraduate level.