【Astronomy Winter School: High-Energy Astrophysics】
台灣國立清華大學將於 2021 年 1 月 18 至 22 日舉辦天文研究學習營,歡迎碩、博班或博士後研究員參加。名額 50 人,費用全免。請各位轉告有興趣的同學或朋友。詳情:
NTHU/NCTS Astronomy Winter School: High-Energy Astrophysics
Jan 18th – 22nd
Online, and NCTS, Hsinchu
We are pleased to announce the NTHU/NCTS Winter School on High-Energy Astrophysics, to be held both online and at the National Center for Theoretical Science, Hsinchu, Taiwan, January 18th – 22nd, 2021.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration is now open. Please complete registration here: http://phys.cts.nthu.edu.tw/actnews/intro.php?Sn=505&OSn=1349
You can indicate whether you will attend on-site or remotely.
Registration deadline: 20th December 2020.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We cordially invite your participation.
The purpose of this winter school is to present an overview of the progress in major areas of cosmic ray astrophysics and gamma-ray astronomy in recent years, and to provide an introduction to the essential physics and concepts. It will also be an opportunity to bring together both new and established researchers in the field for discussion and exchange of ideas.
The programme will cover a broad range of topics within cosmic ray astrophysics and gamma-ray astronomy, ranging from theory/modelling & simulation to instrumentation & observation.
The school is intended for graduate research (PhD and Masters) students and post-docs with an interest in becoming involved in high energy astrophysics (in particular, topics relating to cosmic rays and gamma-rays), as well as early-career scientists already active in the field looking to broaden their understanding. It will comprise of a keynote lecture and six primary lecture series from international experts, plus five highlight science talks to complement the programme. The keynote lecture will be given by Prof Werner Hofmann (Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Heidelberg, Germany).
Please see our website for detailed information about the lecturers, courses and highlight talks: http://phys.cts.nthu.edu.tw/actnews/content.php?Sn=505
Remote attendance is encouraged, particularly for those wishing to attend from outside of Taiwan.
Due to limited availability of seats, those wishing to attend in person should register as early as possible to ensure on-site participation. After on-site spaces are filled, online registration will remain open until 20th December 2020.
Topics
Cosmic rays, gamma-ray astronomy, particle acceleration and interactions, instrumentation
Keynote talk
Werner Hofmann (MPIK)
Invited lecturers
Jim Hinton (MPIK)
Yoshiyuki Inoue (Osaka)
Albert Kong (NTHU)
Frank Rieger (ZAH, Heidelberg/MPIK)
Kinwah Wu (UCL/MSSL)
Hsiang-Yi Karen Yang (NTHU)
Highlight speakers
Hsiang-Kuang Chang (NTHU)
Kwan Lok Li (NCKU)
Alison Mitchell (Adelaide/Zurich)
Ellis Owen (NTHU)
Pooja Surajbali (MPIK)
There is no registration fee. Registration is open now. The registration deadline will be 20th December 2020. Note that on-site participation will be limited to 50 people. Due to the limited availability of seats, interested parties wishing to attend on-site please visit our website and sign up to register as early as possible to ensure your participation. There will be no limitation on the number of people wishing to join remotely.
Financial support for transportation and accommodation expenses is available for the on-site attendees who have no other means of funding support. Please visit our website for more relevant details.
We look forward to seeing you at the winter school.
Organising committee
Dr Ellis Owen
Prof Albert Kong
Institute of Astronomy, National Tsing Hua University
「essential university physics」的推薦目錄:
essential university physics 在 Focus Taiwan Facebook 的最讚貼文
As face masks are becoming an essential accessory amid the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, an expert in physics from a Taiwanese university has shared his knowledge and DIY skills to construct an ultraviolet ray mask disinfection device using common household appliances such as aluminum foil and old lampshades.
https://focustaiwan.tw/society/202004260015
essential university physics 在 利世民 Facebook 的最佳解答
海耶克曾經講過:
The belief derived from physics that measurement is an essential foundation of all sciences is very old. There was more than 300 years ago a German philosopher named Erhard Weigel who strove to construct a universal science which he proposed to call Pantometria, based as the name says on measuring everything.
Much of economics, and if I may add in parenthesis much of contemporary psychology, has indeed become Pantometria in a sense in the principle that if you don't know what measurements mean, measure anyhow because that is what science does. The social sciences building at the University of Chicago indeed still bears since it was built 40 years ago on its outside an inscription taken from the famous physicist Lord Kelvin: "When you cannot measure, your knowledge is meager and unsatisfactory."
I will admit that that may be true, but it is certainly not scientific to insist on measurement where you don't know what your measurements mean. There are cases where measurements are not relevant. What has done much damage to microeconomics is striving for a pseudo-exactness by imitating methods of the physical sciences which have to deal with what are fundamentally much more simple phenomena. And the assumption that it is possible to ascertain all the relevant particular facts still completely dominates the alternative methods of dealing with our constitutional ignorance, which economists have tried to overcome. This of course, is what has come to be called macroeconomics as distinct from microeconomics.
- “Coping with Ignorance,” Imprimis 7 (1978)
essential university physics 在 University Physics - Chapter 1 (Part 1) Fundamental ... 的推薦與評價
This video contains an online lecture on Chapter 1 of University Physics (Young and Freedman, 14th Edition). The lecture is given by Prof. ... <看更多>