Oscar Klein Auditorium(Mon) and Auditorium FB42 (Tue) (Albanova University Center)
Oscar Klein Auditorium(Mon) and Auditorium FB42 (Tue)
Albanova University Center
Roslagstullsbacken 21, Stockholm
Jean-Pierre Lasota, Juri Poutanen(University of Turku / Nordita), Lars Brink, Marek Abramowicz(Göteborg University), Stephan Rosswog(Stockholm University)
Description
Venue
Nordita, Stockholm, Sweden
The recent detections by the twin Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) detectors of gravitational waves is
one of the most important events in the history of science. It is
therefore not surprising that gravitational waves are today the
focus of attention for both the general public and professionals.
There were already many events organized where LIGO's experimental
results have been discussed, but none focused on the mathematical
foundations of the theory behind the discovery. However, LIGO’s
success is not only a triumph of experimental physics and
technology; it is also the culmination of a
century of work by theorists on mathematical descriptions of
gravitational waves.
Nordita (Nordic Institute of Theoretical Physics) organizes a three-day event in Stockholm. The event starts on Sunday, October 9, with the evening lecture by Brian Foster (Oxford University) and Jack Liebeck, internationally acclaimed violinist from Great Britain, on “Musical Einstein” in Riddarhuset.
The event continues on Monday and Tuesday with lectures by world leading experts at the Albanova University Center.
The conference is organized by Marek Abramowicz, Lars Brink, Jean-Pierre Lasota, Juri Poutanen and Stephan Rosswog and is supported by Nordita, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences through its Nobel Institute for Physics, the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education and the Polish Society of Relativity.
Lecture and Welcome reception on Sunday, October 9 (starting at 16.00) at
Riddarhuset, Riddarhustorget 10 (300 m from Gamla Stan tunnelbana station)
[google map]
16:00-17:00 welcome drinks, snacks
17:00-17:30 guided tour of the Riddarhuset
17:30-17:40 Lars Brink (Chalmers): A few words on gravitational waves and Einstein's music
17:40-18:30 Brian Foster (Oxford University) with Jack Liebeck (Royal Academy of Music, UK) on violin:
Musical Einstein : a lecture on Einstein's life-long devotion to music
18:30-20:00 Buffet dinner
Program for Monday, October 10 (at Oscar Klein Auditorium, Albanova University Center)
08:45-09:00 Stephan Rosswog (Stockholm University): Welcome
09:00-09:50 Gary Gibbons (Cambridge University): Gravitational waves and fundamental physics
09:50-10:40 Daniel Kennefick (University of Arkansas): The history of the theory of gravitational waves
10:40-11:10 coffee break
11:10-11:25 Andrzej Trautman in a Krzysztof Zanussi film
11:25-12:15 Piotr Chruściel (University of Vienna): Matematical foundations of the theory of gravitational waves
12:15-13:15 Thibault Damour (keynote speaker; Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques): Gravitational waves and analytic relativity
13:15-14:15 lunch
14:30-15:20 Luciano Rezzolla (Goethe University of Frankfurt): Gravitational waves and neutron star mergers
15:20-16:10 Bernd Brügmann (University of Jena): Gravitational waves and black hole mergers
16:10-16:40 coffee break
16:40-17:10 Stephan Rosswog (Stockholm University): Neutron star mergers: what else apart from gravitational waves?
17:10-17:40 Edvard Mörtsell (Stockholm University):
Gravitational waves, dark matter and dark energy
17:40-18:10 Fawad Hassan (Stockholm University):
Gravitational waves and alternative theories of gravity
18:30-20:00 buffet dinner, poster session
19:50-20:00 Lars Brink (Chalmers): A few final words
Program for Tuesday, October 11 (at Auditorium FB42, Albanova University Center)
09:00-09:30 Andrew King (University of Leicester): Electromagnetic emission from gravitational wave events, and what we might learn
09:30-10:00 Vitor Cardoso (Instituto Superior Técnico, Portugal): Gravitational-wave emission from ultra-compact objects
10:00-10:30 Philippe Grandclément (Observatoire de Paris): Boson stars
10:30-11:00 coffee break
11:00-11:30 Scott Hughes (MIT): Testing the black hole hypothesis with
gravitational wave observations
11:30-12:00 Gerhard Schäfer (Universität Jena): PN approximation and GW physics
12:00-12:45 Paweł Nurowski (Center for Theor. Physics, Warsaw): Asymptotic behaviour of GW
12:45-14:00 lunch
14:00-15:00 poster session
15:00-15:30 Michele Maggiore (Université de Genève): Stochastic GW Background
15:30-16:00 Alberto Sesana (University of Birmingham): Massive black hole binaries: astrophysics and gravitational waves
16:00-16:30 Petr Hořava (University of California, Berkeley): Quantum gravity and gravitational waves
16:30-17:00 coffee break
17:00-17:30 Luis Lehner (Perimeter Institute): Conference summary