The WE Heraeus Physics School and the 62nd Karpacz Winter School in Theoretical Physics will be held from 28 February to 6 March 2026. Compact stars, dense remnants of supernovae, compress about 1.4 solar masses into a 10 km radius—reaching densities beyond atomic nuclei. Their extreme compactness makes them unique laboratories for high-density matter. Gravitational-wave detections of binary neutron star mergers now allow direct probes of such conditions, with hot, dynamic post-merger remnants offering complementary insight to cold pulsars. With next-generation observatories like the Einstein Telescope and Cosmic Explorer, multi-messenger astrophysics—combining gravitational waves, electromagnetic signals, and neutrinos—will sharpen constraints on the dense-matter equation of state, extreme gravity, and heavy-element nucleosynthesis. Mergers also serve as standard sirens, enabling independent measurements of the Hubble constant. The school will cover the thermal history of the Universe after its first second, from the quark–hadron transition to neutrino decoupling, linking microphysics to cosmological observables. Topics include the Hubble tension, modified gravity, primordial magnetic fields, compact-object mergers, future gravitational-wave science, and primordial black holes as dark-matter or galaxy-seed candidates—offering a unified view across astrophysics, cosmology, and particle physics.
Conference information
Date/Time
Starts
Ends
All times are in Europe/BerlinEurope/Berlin
Location
Karpacz, Poland
Artus Hotel Karpacz.
Extra information
Lecturers:
Mark Alford (Washington University, St. Louis, USA) Microphysics of Binary Neutron Star Mergers
Veronica Dexheimer (Kent State University, USA) Equation of State of Dense Matter in Hot and Cold Neutron Stars
Tim Dietrich (University of Potsdam, Germany) Numerical Simulations of Neutron Star Binary Mergers and Gravitational Waves
Günther Hasinger (German Center for Astrophysics (DZA) Görlitz, Germany)
Samaya Nissanke (DESY, DZA, and University of Potsdam, Germany) Gravitational Wave Sources and Gravitational Wave Data Analysis
Levon Pogosian(Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada) Recent Challenges to the Standard Cosmological Model
Andreas Schmitt (University of Southampton, UK) Non-Equilibrium Dynamics and Transport in Dense Matter
Dominik J. Schwarz(University of Bielefeld, Germany) Multimessenger Cosmology
Organizers:
Armen Sedrakian(University of Wrocław and Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies)
David Blaschke (University of Wrocław and HZDR/CASUS Görlitz)