Aiheena aine: alkuräjähdyksestä lääketutkimukseen

Torstai 27. toukokuu 2021 klo 17:00 - 19:00 EEST

Zoom

Lipunmyynti verkossa on loppunut.

In 2015, humans detected gravitational waves for the first time. They were ripples in the fabric of space and time, released from two black holes spiraling and merging together around 1.3 billion years ago. Now, physicists focus on a new challenge: how can we detect gravitational waves that are even older – having formed 13.8 billion years ago, when the universe was just a fraction of a second old?

Closer to the Earth (but still in outer space), energetic particles surfing on electromagnetic waves are accelerating at a tiny fraction of the speed of light. They have inspired scientists to build miniature accelerators that could fit on a dining table. However, there’s an additional complication: how do we build materials that can survive long-lasting exposure to extreme electric fields and high-energy radiation found in laboratory experiments and natural environments?

Moreover, materials matter in closer quarters than outer space. The pandemic has reminded us all of the dramatic impact that diseases can have on our life and the role scientists take in improving our individual and collective well-being. One example is ongoing research on smart drug release, where molecules that can be activated by light once they reach the desired target in a patient’s body. Another is the delicate use of mathematical tools to extract crucial imaging of bodily organs required in medical diagnostics.

If you want to learn how scientists approach these challenges and many more, join us at this virtual event. You have the opportunity to ask questions from our researchers, and a few lucky participants will be offered the opportunity to have a café meetup with two scientists.

SPEAKERS:
1. Samuli Siltanen: Viipalekuvaus – kolmiulotteinen röntgenkatse (in Finnish)
2. Shirin Tavakoli: How can nano-sized drug carriers, a thousand times smaller than a human hair, help us treat eye diseases?
3. Daniel Cutting: Listening for the origins of the Universe with cosmological gravitational waves
4. Robert Luxenhofer: 3D printing for biomedical applications and soft robotics
5. Heta Nieminen: Nanoja pinoon – arkipäivän materiaalikemiaa (in Finnish)
6. Adnane Osmane: The surprising link between turbulent winds in the sky and particles traveling at the speed of light in space
7. Walter Wuensch: Developing particle accelerator technology – from high-energy physics to cancer therapy

The event will be streamed live on Tiedekulma:
https://tiedekulmamedia.helsinki.fi/fi/web/tiedekulma/player/webcast?playerId=38521893&eventId=102949741

Adnane Osmane

0294150664

matter_and_materials@protonmail.com