Tidligere arrangementer - Side 49
Caroline Palmer, Professor in the Department of Psychology at McGill University, will speak at RITMO's Seminar Series
Dr Hanna Ollila, Research Fellow at the University of Finland, will present her research as part of the NCMM Tuesday Seminar Series.
Abstract: T cell activation is initiated upon T cell receptor (TCR) binding to cognate peptide-MHC complexes on the surface of antigen presenting cells (APCs). This initiates the formation of the immunological synapse – a specialized hub for bidirectional membrane transfer between T cells and APCs which is essential for processes such as downregulation of triggered TCR and T cell-mediated stimulation of B cells. Here, I will present some recent advancements in our understanding of how this is regulated.
This talk is part of the Mechanics Lunch Seminar series. Bring-your-own-lunch and lots of questions. Hybrid format via Zoom possible on demand (contact timokoch at uio.no)
Prof. Philippa Browning, Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics, The University of Manchester.
On April 28, the Centre for Gender Research (STK) will hold a joint academic lunch event together with C-REX – Center for Research on Extremism.
Abstract: What links a baby’s first breath to adhesive debonding, enhanced oil recovery, filtration or multiphase microfluidics? These processes all involve two-phase flows in rigid or elastic confined vessels and are often prone to interfacial instabilities. The canonical viscous fingering instability, which occurs when air displaces a viscous fluid in the narrow gap between two parallel plates, offers a versatile testbed for such phenomena. In this talk, I will use both experiments and numerical simulations of depth-averaged models to explore several aspects of bubble dynamics in Hele-Shaw cells. I will first show how the onset of fingering can be suppressed when replacing the upper plate of the vessel with an elastic sheet. Interfacial flows in narrow gaps can also exhibit considerable disorder, but they are rarely investigated from a dynamical systems’ perspective. I will show how compliance can promote rich multiplicity of front propagation modes in a channel before turning to bubble propagation in a rigid channel with a depth perturbation. There I will explore how the bubble’s organised transient dynamics is orchestrated by weakly-unstable steady propagation modes, and how its long-term behaviour may be practically unpredictable.
This talk is part of the Mechanics Lunch Seminar series. Bring-your-own-lunch and lots of questions. Hybrid format via Zoom possible on demand (contact timokoch at uio.no)
Gjesteforelesning med Hartmut Rosa om danningens (Bildung) rolle i det akselererende samfunnet.
Hvordan l?ser storsamfunnet dilemmaer knyttet til livssynsbaserte utdanningsinstitusjoner; dilemmaer som oppst?r i institusjonenes m?te med religi?se og seksuelle minoriteter, eller n?r institusjonene utfordrer samfunnets verdisyn slik dette er nedfelt i lov- og regelverk om h?yere utdanning? Dette fagseminaret etterf?lges av en panelsamtale om friskoler og skeive p? Litteraturhuset kl. 19.00.
Abstract: A random, labyrinthine pattern emerges during slow drainage of a granular-fluid system in two- dimensional confinement. Compacted grains are pushed ahead of the fluid-air interface, which becomes unstable due to a competition between capillary forces and the frictional stress mobilized by grain-grain contact networks. We reproduce the pattern formation process in numerical simulations and present an analytical treatment that predicts the characteristic length scale of the labyrinth structure. The pattern length scale decreases with increasing volume fraction of grains in the system and increases with the system thickness. By tilting the model, aligned finger structures, with a characteristic width, emerge. A transition from vertical to horizontal alignment of the finger structures is observed as the tilting angle and the granular density are varied. The dynamics is reproduced in simulations. We also show how the system may explain patterns observed in nature, created during the early stages of a dike formation.
This talk is part of the Mechanics Lunch Seminar series. Bring-your-own-lunch and lots of questions. Hybrid format via Zoom possible on demand (contact timokoch at uio.no)
Michaela Brchnelova, KU Leuven, Belgium.
C*-algebra seminar by Alexander Stolin
Associate Professor Fredrik S. Hage, the Structure Physics section
Professor Christophe Fraser, University of Oxford.
Welcome to our new seminar series ?Consumption and sustainability?. The first speaker is Professor Alan Warde who will discuss the sociology of sustainable consumption.
How important is gender for young people in contemporary China? What challenges and aspirations are central to young Chinese women? This seminar will focus on how young women from China negotiate different expectations and identities both inside and outside their homeland.
NCMM Associate Investigator, Professor Simona Chera, Group Leader of the Chera Lab at the University of Bergen will present her research as part of the NCMM Tuesday Seminar Series.
Over the last decade, the Kurdish areas in the Middle East have seen several violent conflicts. Hundreds of thousands of Kurds have been uprooted from their homes and areas of origin. This adds a new chapter to an already long history of displacement and migration. In this seminar, we will investigate some of the gendered aspects of these recent migration flows. The seminar will be held in English.
By Johan Watz from Karlstad University, Sweden
Reetika Joshi, postdoctoral fellow of Rosseland Centre for Solar Physics (RoCS), University of Oslo.
C*-algebra seminar by Alexander Mang (Saarland University)
Nicola Dibben, Professor at the Department of Music, University of Sheffield, will speak at RITMO's Seminar Series