Laura Baudis, Elusives PI at the University of Zurich, gave a talk at the Heidelberg-Karsruhe Research Partnership (HEiKA) Symposium on the 8th June, in Heidelberg, titled “The dark side of the universe”
Thomas Schwetz-Mangold participated in local radio broadcast, talking about astrophysics, on May 16, 2018
Thomas Schwetz-Mangold, Elusives PI at Karsruhe Institute of Technology participated in a local radio broadcast of the programme "Per Radio durch die Galaxis" (By radio through the galaxy) in May 2018, where he spoke about astrophysics.
Thomas Schwetz-Mangold gave a talk on Dark Matter at the HEiKA symposium on June 8, 2018
Thomas Schwetz-Mangold, Elusives PI at Karsruhe Institute of Technology gave a talk at the Heidelberg-Karsruhe Research Partnership (HEiKA) Symposium on the 8th June, in Heidelberg, titled "Dunkle Materie - Der Schlüssel zu neuer Physik?" (Dark Matter: The key to new Physics?)
The Neutrino 2018 conference is underway this week in Germany, where hundreds of physicists who study these elusive particles gather to discuss the latest developments in the field. Just what is it that these researchers do? Why are neutrinos such a big deal?
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Billions of neutrinos fly through our bodies every second, unnoticed. These puny, chargeless particles are the most abundant in the universe: they currently outnumber electrons, protons and neutrons by a factor of 10 billion. But despite their everyday presence, neutrinos are one of modern physics’ biggest head-scratchers.