| >> All Department Seminars and Colloquia |
The Department of Physics and Astronomy Colloquium is held on Monday afternoons at 4:15 p.m. in room SLH 100 unless otherwise noted.
|
|
|
Fall 2003
Colloquium Bibliographies (from the Science & Engineering Library)
|
September 1
- Labor Day, University Holiday
September 8
- Ordering in low-dimensional magnets
Tommaso Roscilde
Department of Physics,
University of Southern California
Abstract
September 15
- Origin of the Solar Wind
Richard Woo
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Abstract
September 22
- Magnetism at Surfaces and Interfaces
Charles Falco
Optical Sciences Center,
University of Arizona
September 29
- Glass breaks like metals, but at the nanometer scale
Elisabeth Bouchaud
Physics and Chemistry of Surfaces and Interfaces Division,
CEA-SACLAY
, France
Abstract
October 6
- Low-Energy Electron Attachment to Molecules and Clusters
Ilya Fabrikant
Dept. of Physics & Astronomy,
University of Nebraska, Lincoln
October 13
- Effect of phonon confinement on thermal conduction
Alexander Balandin
Nano-Device Lab,
Department of Electrical Engineering,
University of California, Riverside
Abstract
October 20
- From genes to behavior-a genomic analysis of Drosophila sex determination
Michelle Arbeitman
Molecular and Computational Biology,
Department of Biological Sciences,
University of Southern California
October 27
- The World of the Very Small; Nano-photonics, Nano-electronics and Nano-lithography
Eli Yablonovitch
Optoelectronics Group,
Electrical Engineering Department,
UCLA
Abstract
November 3
- Space Weather: Geomagnetic Quiet, HILDCAAs, Magnetic Storms and Extreme Storms
Bruce Tsurutani
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Abstract
November 10
- Atmospheres and Oceans of the Terrestrial Planets
Gary Peterson
Department of Geological Sciences,
San Diego State University
Abstract
November 17
- Canceled
November 24
- Electronic Soft Matter in the Manganese Oxides
Peter Littlewood
Theory of Condensed Matter Group,
Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics,
Cambridge University
December 1
- Nanotechnology to go: Hybrid devices powered by biomolecular motors
Henry Hess
Center for Nanotechnology,
Department of Bioengineering,
University of Washington
Abstract
|
|
| >> All Department Seminars and Colloquia |
|