Directions

Imperial College has its own detailed information on general directions and on getting to the theoretical physics group. The College is located on Prince Consort Road, south of Hyde Park (map). The most convenient access is via tube (South Kensington, Gloucester Road) or buses. The Theoretical Physics group resides on the 5th floor of the Huxley Building. The group also possesses its own description.

Seminars at Imperial College

Found at least 20 result(s)

21.03.2012 (Wednesday)

Aspects of modern geometry: up-dating Hilbert

Colloquium Sir Simon Donaldson (Imperial College)

at:
16:00 IC
room Blackett, Lecture Theatre 1
abstract:

In the first part of the talk I will discuss the meaning of "geometry" in contemporary mathematics and some general developments. In the second part I will focus on a few particular problems which I know more about, such as questions involving topology and geometric structures on manifolds. The talk will in part be built around an imaginary conversation with Hilbert.

21.03.2012 (Wednesday)

Supersymmetric three sphere partition functions

Triangular Seminar Daniel L. Jafferis (Harvard)

at:
17:20 IC
room Blackett, Lecture Theatre 2
abstract:

19.03.2012 (Monday)

N=2 Gauge Theories: Congruence Subgroups, Coset Graphs and Modular Surfaces

Regular Seminar Yang-Hui He (City University)

at:
13:00 IC
room H341
abstract:

We establish a correspondence between generalized quiver gauge theories in four-dimensions and congruence subgroups of the modular group, hinging upon the trivalent graphs which arise in both. The gauge theories and the graphs are enumerated and their numbers are compared. The correspondence is particularly striking for genus zero torsion-free congruence subgroups which are crucial to Moonshine. We analyze in detail the case of index 24, where modular elliptic K3 surfaces emerge: here, the elliptic j-invariants can be recast as dessins d'enfant which dictate the Seiberg-Witten curves.

16.03.2012 (Friday)

Amplitudes for Fivebranes

Regular Seminar Moshe Rozali (U. of British Columbia)

at:
13:30 IC
room B741
abstract:

14.03.2012 (Wednesday)

07.03.2012 (Wednesday)

The free energy of Chern-Simons theories and the AdS4/CFT3 correspondence

Regular Seminar Claudius Klare (Milano Bicocca)

at:
14:00 IC
room H503
abstract:

05.03.2012 (Monday)

Fluid-Gravity Duality at a Cutoff Surface

Regular Seminar Cynthia Keeler (Michigan)

at:
14:00 IC
room H711C
abstract:

29.02.2012 (Wednesday)

Correlation functions, Wilson loops, and local operators

Regular Seminar Tim Adamo (Oxford U.)

at:
14:00 IC
room H503
abstract:

24.02.2012 (Friday)

String theory dualities and supergravity ultraviolet divergences

Regular Seminar Pierre Vanhove (SACLAY, SphT)

at:
14:00 IC
room B539
abstract:

17.02.2012 (Friday)

n -n duality and universality

Regular Seminar Ruben Mkrtchyan (Yerevan Phys. Inst.)

at:
14:00 IC
room tba
abstract:

10.02.2012 (Friday)

Fermionic T-duality in supergravity

Regular Seminar Eoin O Colgain (Oviedo U.)

at:
13:30 IC
room B741
abstract:

08.02.2012 (Wednesday)

Quantum Nambu geometry in string theory

Regular Seminar Chong-Sun Chu (Durham)

at:
14:00 IC
room H503
abstract:

01.02.2012 (Wednesday)

Conifold Geometries and NS5-branes

Regular Seminar Jock McOrist (Cambridge U.)

at:
14:00 IC
room H503
abstract:

I will describe a how to construct the supergravity solution for a pair of NS5-branes, intersecting on R^{1,3} and localised in all directions except a single transverse circle. Such solutions are rare, and yet may have many potential applications in gauge-gravity duality and model building. The construction invovles developing an explicit map between the conifold metric and the geometry of two intersecting NS5-branes. I will also describe additional intersecting brane solutions corresponding to smoothing out the intersection by, for example, separating branes or putting a metric on the intersection.

31.01.2012 (Tuesday)

TBA

Exceptional Seminar Daniel Ricci Pacifici (Padova)

at:
14:00 IC
room B741
abstract:

24.01.2012 (Tuesday)

Homogeneous supergravity backgrounds

Regular Seminar Jose Figueroa-O'Farrill (Edinburgh)

at:
13:30 IC
room H503
abstract:

We've known since childhood that symmetry can be a very powerful tool in solving partial differential equations. With a little symmetry, one can reduce the number of independent variables, whereas with some more symmetry one can usually separate variables and reduce the problem to solving ordinary differential equations. Given enough symmetry, though, partial differential equations become algebraic. A large body of current research in our field requires finding solutions to the (super)gravity field equations and in this talk I will motivate the search for homogeneous supergravity backgrounds and mention some recent results in this area.

18.01.2012 (Wednesday)

F-Theory, Seiberg-Witten Curves and N = 2 Dualities

Regular Seminar Jihye Seo (McGill U.)

at:
15:00 IC
room H503
abstract:

11.01.2012 (Wednesday)

14.12.2011 (Wednesday)

Gravity duals of supersymmetric gauge theories on curved manifolds

Triangular Seminar James Sparks (Oxford U.)

at:
17:00 IC
room Blackett, LT2
abstract:

14.12.2011 (Wednesday)

Holographic duals for N=4 SYM on AdS_4 and branes ending on branes

Triangular Seminar Ofer Aharony (Weizmann Institute)

at:
15:30 IC
room Blackett, LT 2
abstract:

I will start by discussing the 4d N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on two spaces with a boundary - a half-line (times three infinite dimensions) and four dimensional anti-de Sitter space. I will review in detail the possible choices of boundary conditions for this theory, and then exhibit the solutions of string theory (supergravity) that are holographically dual to the N=4 SYM theory on these spaces. The same methods used to obtain these duals can also be used to find duals for 3d N=4 and 4d N=2 superconformal field theories that appear in brane configurations, and I will discuss these solutions as well.

09.12.2011 (Friday)

Spinning Conformal Correlators and Blocks

Regular Seminar Slava Rychkov (LPTENS)

at:
14:00 IC
room B630
abstract: