The Oxford AI Gala sees 350 AI professionals, founders, and researchers gather on 31 May 2025 at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History. This event is a unique opportunity to connect with Oxford's world-class AI ecosystem, global industry leaders, and University of Oxford researchers and students.
QSHS: An Axion Dark Matter Resonant Search Apparatus
Alsulami, A
Bailey, I
Carosi, G
Chapman, G
Chakraborty, B
Daw, E
Du, N
Durham, S
Esmenda, J
Gallop, J
Gamble, T
Godfrey, T
Gregori, G
Halliday, J
Hao, L
Hardy, E
Laird, E
Leek, P
March-Russell, J
Meeson, P
Mostyn, C
Pashkin, Y
Peatain, S
Perry, M
Piscitelli, M
Reig, M
Romans, E
Sarkar, S
Smith, P
Sokolov, A
Song, N
Sundararajan, A
Tan, B
West, S
Withington, S
(16 Apr 2025)
Nonequilibrium physics of brain dynamics
Nartallo-Kaluarachchi, R
Kringelbach, M
Deco, G
Lambiotte, R
Goriely, A
(16 Apr 2025)
Reply: Understanding and misunderstanding cell counts of the human brain: the crux of biological variation.
Goriely, A
Brain : a journal of neurology
awaf137
(15 Apr 2025)
Thu, 01 May 2025
13:30
13:30
The geometry of Feynman integrals
Rodrigo Pitombo
Abstract
Feynman integrals are the essential building blocks of observables in perturbative Quantum Field Theories. As precision experiments in high-energy physics are becoming more common, understanding the structure of higher loop integrals has become very important from a phenomenology point of view. On the mathematical physics side, such investigations have led to profound connections to geometry. In particular, there is a correspondence between Feynman integrals and algebraic varieties and knowing what geometry a given Feynman integral corresponds to offers invaluable lessons in solving it. In this talk, I will start with a pedagogical review of modern methods to solve higher loop integrals. Then, with a simple example, I will show how one can infer the geometry associated with an integral and discuss some of the implications of this connection.
Junior Strings is a seminar series where DPhil students present topics of common interest that do not necessarily overlap with their own research area. This is primarily aimed at PhD students and post-docs but everyone is welcome.
Anisotropy in Pantheon+ supernovae
Sarkar, S
European Physical Journal C
Fri, 16 May 2025
14:00 -
15:00
L1
Prelims Preparation
Abstract
This session is aimed at first-year undergraduates preparing for Prelims exams. A panel of lecturers will share key advice on exam technique and revision strategies, and a current student will offer practical tips from their own experience. This event complements the Friday@2 session in Week 1 on Dealing with Exam Anxiety.