26–31 May 2021
Europe/Berlin timezone

Contribution List

31 out of 31 displayed
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  1. Mojtaba Mohammadi Najafabadi (Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences (IR))
    26/05/2021, 13:45
  2. Urs Wiedemann (CERN)
    26/05/2021, 14:00
  3. Alexander Schmah (Ruprecht Karls Universitaet Heidelberg (DE))
    26/05/2021, 15:00
  4. Alina Czajka (National Centre for Nuclear Research)
    26/05/2021, 16:00
  5. Renaud Boussarie (CPHT, École polytechnique)
    26/05/2021, 16:30
  6. Miguel Ángel Escobedo Espinosa (Instituto Galego de Física de Altas Enerxías)
    26/05/2021, 17:30
  7. Travis Dore (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
    26/05/2021, 18:00
  8. Prof. Soeren Schlichting (Universität Bielefeld)
    26/05/2021, 18:30
  9. Chun Shen (Wayne State University)
    27/05/2021, 13:45
  10. Ali Tabatabaee (IPM, SPA)
    27/05/2021, 14:30
  11. Michael Strickland (Kent State University)
    27/05/2021, 15:00
  12. Michael McNelis (Ohio State University)
    27/05/2021, 16:00
  13. Nina Kersting (Bielefeld University)
    27/05/2021, 16:30
  14. Michał Spaliński
    27/05/2021, 17:00

    I will describe a recent addition to the family of causal and
    stable models of relativistic hydrodynamics. I will also address the wider question of how one can match such effective descriptions to underlying microscopic theories.

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  15. Viljami Leino (Technical University of Munich (TUM))
    27/05/2021, 18:00
  16. Jakub Jankowski (University of Warsaw)
    27/05/2021, 18:30

    It is frequently supposed that quark-gluon plasma created in heavy-ion collisions undergoes free streaming at early times. We examine this issue based on the assumption that a universal attractor dominates the dynamics already at the earliest stages, which offers a way to connect the initial state with the start of the hydrodynamic expansion in an approximate but conceptually transparent...

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  17. Francesco Becattini (Unversity of Florence)
    28/05/2021, 13:45
  18. Willian Matioli Serenone (Universidade de Campinas)
    28/05/2021, 14:30
  19. Enrico Speranza (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
    28/05/2021, 15:00
  20. Mr Rajeev Singh (Institute of Nuclear Physics Polish Academy of Sciences)
    28/05/2021, 16:00
  21. Wojciech Florkowski (Jagiellonian University)
    28/05/2021, 16:30
  22. Mike Lisa (Ohio State University (US))
    28/05/2021, 17:30
  23. Andrei Starinets (Oxford University)
    31/05/2021, 13:45
  24. Nora Weickgenannt (Goethe University Frankfurt)
    31/05/2021, 14:30
  25. Misha Stephanov (UIC)
    31/05/2021, 15:00
  26. Marcelo Disconzi
    31/05/2021, 16:00

    The discovery of the quark-gluon plasma that forms in heavy-ion collision experiments provides a unique opportunity to study the properties of matter under extreme conditions, as the quark-gluon plasma is the hottest, smallest, and densest fluid known to humanity. Studying the quark-gluon plasma also provides a window into the earliest moments of the universe, since microseconds after the Big...

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  27. Lorenzo Gavassino
    31/05/2021, 16:45

    It is well known that relativistic hydrodynamic theories, to be "realistic", should be causal and stable. But stable with respect to what? The standard notion of stability one typically refers to is hydrodynamic stability, namely the requirement that on-shell perturbations away from the state of thermodynamic equilibrium remain bounded over time. I will argue that such a stability criterion is...

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  28. Debora Mroczek (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
    31/05/2021, 17:30
  29. Farid Taghinavaz (IPM)
    31/05/2021, 18:00
  30. Derek Teaney (Stony Brook University)
    31/05/2021, 18:30
  31. Dr Radoslaw Ryblewski (Institute of Nuclear Physics PAN)
    31/05/2021, 19:15