107 events in 2025
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Seminar
ComSHeL Launch Meeting
May 1 (Thu) at 14:00 - 15:00, 2025
This is the very first meeting of the new Computationally-drive Solutions for Healthier Lives (ComSHeL) Study Group. The study group brings together members from iTHEMS' Fundamental Division together with the ECL Mathematical Genomics Unit and Teams from iTHEMS Applied Math Division (Medical Science Data-driven Math Team and Medical Science Deep Learning Team). The goal of this first meeting will be to discuss and decide on the format for this monthly study group, and to get to know each other (each member introducing their research briefly). I hope you can take the time to join us.
Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359
Event Official Language: English
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The 28th MACS Colloquium
April 25 (Fri) at 14:45 - 18:30, 2025
Shizuo Kaji (Professor, Institute of Mathematics for Industry, Kyushu University / Professor, Center for Science Adventure and Collaborative Research Advancement (SACRA), Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)
14:45-15:00 Teatime discussion 15:00-16:00 Talk by Prof. Shizuo Kaji (Professor, Institute of Mathematics for Industry, Kyushu University / Professor, Center for Science Adventure and Collaborative Research Advancement (SACRA), Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University) 16:15-17:20 2024 Study Group introduction session 17:30-18:30 Discussion
Venue: Science Seminar House (Map 9), Kyoto University
Event Official Language: Japanese
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Seminar
Insights on Issues in the Cold Dark Matter Hypothesis
April 25 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:15, 2025
Yuka Kaneda (Ph.D. Student, University of Tsukuba)
Dark matter accounts for 85% of the matter component of our universe, but its true nature is still unclear. The Lambda-Cold Dark Matter (CDM) model, which thought to be the standard model, reproduces well the statistical properties of the large-scale structure of our universe. However, at the scale of galaxies and dwarf galaxies, serious discrepancies between the predictions of the CDM model and observations have been pointed out. In this study, we tackle on the “cusp-core problem” and the “missing satellite problem,” which are typical examples of such discrepancies, using N-body simulations. In the talk, the physical trigger of cusp-to-core transition and the novel method to find missed satellites are presented.
Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
Asymptotic Waves in Stars
April 23 (Wed) at 14:00 - 15:30, 2025
Jim Fuller (Professor, Division of Physics, Mathematics, and Astronomy (TAPIR), California Institute of Technology (Caltech), USA)
Waves propagating through stars often have very short wavelengths in the radial direction, enabling WKB approximations that facilitate understanding. The main types of waves that propagate in stars are acoustic waves (restored by pressure forces) and gravity waves (restored by buoyancy forces). I will also discuss how the properties of these waves are changed by rotation (adding Coriolis and centrifugal forces) and magnetic fields (adding Lorentz forces). Finally, I will discuss how these waves carry energy and angular momentum through stars, and discuss some potential consequences for stellar evolution.
Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359
Event Official Language: English
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Workshop
From Quarks to Neutron Stars: Insights from kHz gravitational waves
April 23 (Wed) - 24 (Thu), 2025
Astronomical observations of binary neutron star mergers and supernovae provide unique opportunities to explore physics spanning from quarks to neutron stars. The groundbreaking multi-messenger observation of GW170817, combining electromagnetic signals and gravitational waves, vividly demonstrated this potential. Furthermore, if a core-collapse supernova were to occur in our galaxy, it would likely become the first event where electromagnetic signals, neutrinos, and gravitational waves are detected together. The interior of neutron stars is not yet well understood due to their extreme density, where exotic states of matter may emerge. Gravitational waves, particularly in the kilohertz band, play a crucial role in extracting information about such ultra-high densities. In recent years, several concepts for kilohertz-band gravitational wave detectors, such as Australia's NEMO, have been proposed to advance multi-messenger studies of high density astrophysical objects. KAGRA in Japan is also exploring upgrades aimed at enhancing high-frequency sensitivity, which could significantly improve sky localization accuracy and enable the detection of post-merger signals. This workshop aims to explore the transformative potential of high-frequency gravitational wave observations for multi-messenger astrophysics, with a focus on their implications for nuclear and neutron star physics. The workshop aims to spark dynamic discussions and cultivate new collaborations among participants through invited talks by leading experts and engaging poster presentations.
Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
On IR/UV divergence of inflationary decoherence
April 22 (Tue) at 14:00 - 15:30, 2025
Fumiya Sano (Ph.D. Student, Institute of Science Tokyo)
Supported by observational evidence indicating that cosmological scalar perturbations were nearly Gaussian at the beginning of the universe, it is anticipated that the origin of these perturbations is quantum fluctuations. Consequently, cosmic inflation provides a valuable laboratory for testing the quantum nature with/of gravity. Evaluation of the quantumness of the primordial perturbations is an inevitable step for the purpose. However, quantum states of the perturbations are suffered from IR/UV divergence, resulting in fully classical states. In this presentation, I will first review the evaluation of the quantum coherence in de Sitter spacetime as a measure of quantumness, and then show how to regularize the divergence.
Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359
Event Official Language: English
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iTHEMS x academist Online Event "World of Mathematical Sciences 2025"
April 19 (Sat) at 10:00 - 15:30, 2025
Yuuka Kanakubo (Postdoctoral Researcher, RIKEN-Berkeley Center, Division of Global Collaborations and Research Talent Development, RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS))
Kan Kitamura (Special Postdoctoral Researcher, Division of Fundamental Mathematical Science, RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS))
Leo Speidel (RIKEN ECL Research Unit Leader, Mathematical Genomics RIKEN ECL Research Unit, Division of Fundamental Mathematical Science, RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS))
Yuki Yokokura (Senior Research Scientist, Division of Fundamental Mathematical Science, RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS))Venue: via Zoom
Event Official Language: Japanese
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Seminar
Artificial Intelligence and Neuroscience
April 11 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:30, 2025
Junichi Chikazoe (Professor, Center for Brain,Mind and KANSEI Sciences Research, Hiroshima University)
Recent advancements in artificial intelligence have led to various discoveries in the field of neuroscience. For example, it has been demonstrated that the information on orientation columns in the visual cortex and the basic taste information in the gustatory cortex can be extracted by applying machine learning to relatively low-resolution functional MRI data. Additionally, intriguing findings have emerged, such as the information processing structures of artificial neural circuits—designed independently of the brain—showing similarities to those of biological neural networks. In this talk, I will discuss the applications of artificial intelligence in neuroscience and explore future directions in this field.
Venue: Seminar Room #359 (Main Venue) / via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
iTHEMS Biology Study Group April Launch Meeting (Part 2)
April 10 (Thu) at 13:00 - 14:00, 2025
Let's launch our Biology Study Group activities for the new year (Part 2 of 2). This meeting will be used to (1) say welcome to new member (SPDR Kenji Okubo, and Postdoc Lucas Sort); (2) discuss Biology seminar management in light of the new iTHEMS Centre; and (3) catch up on each other's current research. Since this will probably take us 2h, this will be Part 2 of 2 (Part 1 was on 4/3). On 4/10 (Part 2) we will get a 15 min introduction talk by Postdoc Lucas Sort. This meeting is open to all RIKEN and guests. You do not need to be a member of the iTHEMS Biology Study Group.
Venue: via Zoom / Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Main Research Building
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
A Strategy for Proving the Strong Eigenstate Thermalization Hypothesis: Chaotic Systems and Holography
April 3 (Thu) at 16:00 - 17:00, 2025
Taishi Kawamoto (Ph.D. Student / JSPS Research Fellow DC, Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto University)
The strong eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH) provides a sufficient condition for thermalization and equilibration. Although it is expected to hold in a wide class of highly chaotic theories, there are only a few analytic examples demonstrating the strong ETH in special cases, often through methods related to integrability. In this talk, I will explore sufficient conditions for the strong ETH that may apply to a broad range of chaotic theories. These conditions are expressed as inequalities involving the long-time averages of real-time thermal correlators. Specifically, I will discuss bottom-up holographic models that satisfy these conditions under certain assumptions, which are expected to hold in such models. This talk is based on the preprint 2411.09746 [hep-th].
Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
Gauge subtleties and the finiteness of loop corrections beyond slow roll
April 3 (Thu) at 14:00 - 15:30, 2025
Danilo Artigas (JSPS Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of Physics Ⅱ, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)
The early universe undergoes a phase of exponential expansion called inflation, under which quantum fluctuations are amplified and later seed cosmological structures. A long-standing question is whether interactions of these quantum fields may significantly affect the n-point statistics of cosmological observables. These corrections are known as loop corrections. Recently, Kristiano and Yokoyama claimed that, in scenarios beyond slow-roll inflation, the one-loop correction of super-Hubble fluctuations could become non-negligible and violate cosmological-perturbation theory. This result is highly debated, and in this talk we will use a non-linear approach known as delta N formalism to evaluate these loop corrections. We find the existence of loop corrections for modes close to the Hubble scale, however, these corrections are quickly suppressed for long-wavelength modes. We also show how the result of Kristiano and Yokoyama may arise when truncating the perturbative expansion, and how this result depends on the chosen gauge.
Venue: Seminar Room #359
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
iTHEMS Biology Study Group April Launch Meeting (Part 1)
April 3 (Thu) at 14:00 - 15:00, 2025
Let's launch our Biology Study Group activities for the new year (Part 1 of 2). This meeting will be used to (1) say welcome to new member (SPDR Kenji Okubo, and Postdoc Lucas Sort); (2) discuss Biology seminar management in light of the new iTHEMS Centre; and (3) catch up on each other's current research. Since this will probably take us 2h, this will be Part 1 of 2 (Part 2 on 4/10). On 4/3 (Part 1) we will get a 15 min introduction talk by SPDR Kenji Okubo. This meeting is open to all RIKEN and guests. You do not need to be a member of the iTHEMS Biology Study Group.
Venue: via Zoom / 4th floor public space, Main Research Building
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
Omega Meson from Lattice QCD
April 2 (Wed) at 15:00 - 16:00, 2025
Haobo Yan (Ph.D. Student, School of Physics, Peking University, China)
The three-body problem, renowned for its unsolvable nature in celestial mechanics and homonymous science fiction, is not only solvable in the quantum realm regarding spectra but also offers profound insights into QCD. In this talk, I will present the first-ever lattice calculation of the resonance parameters for the lightest hadron decaying into three particles, the -meson. By mapping finite-volume energy levels to infinite-volume scattering amplitude, a pole position trajectory is obtained that, when extrapolated to the physical point, shows good agreement with the experiment.
Venue: Seminar Room #359 (Main Venue) / via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
The rarer-sex effect
March 27 (Thu) at 16:00 - 17:00, 2025
Andy Gardner (Professor, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, UK)
The study of sex allocation—that is, the investment of resources into male versus female reproductive effort—yields among the best quantitative evidence for Darwinian adaptation, and has long enjoyed a tight and productive interplay of theoretical and empirical research. The fitness consequences of an individual's sex allocation decisions depend crucially upon the sex allocation behaviour of others and, accordingly, sex allocation is readily conceptualized in terms of an evolutionary game. I will discuss the historical development of understanding of a fundamental driver of the evolution of sex allocation—the rarer-sex effect—from its inception in the writing of Charles Darwin in 1871 through to its explicit framing in terms of consanguinity and reproductive value by William D. Hamilton in 1972. I will show that step-wise development of theory proceeded through refinements in the conceptualization of the strategy set, the payoff function and the unbeatable strategy.
Venue: #445-447, 4F (Hybrid), Main Research Building / via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
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Seminar
Stability of nonsingular black holes
March 27 (Thu) at 15:00 - 16:30, 2025
Shinji Tsujikawa (Professor, Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Waseda University)
We show that nonsingular black holes (BHs) realized in nonlinear electrodynamics are always prone to Laplacian instability around the center because of a negative squared sound speed in the angular direction. This is the case for both electric and magnetic BHs, where the instability of one of the vector-field perturbations leads to enhancing a dynamical gravitational perturbation in the even-parity sector. Thus, the background regular metric is no longer maintained in a steady state. We also generalize our analysis to the case in which a scalar field is present besides the U(1) gauge field and find no explicit examples of linearly stable nonsingular BHs. Our results suggest that the construction of regular BHs without instabilities is generally challenging within the scheme of classical field theories.
Venue: Seminar Room #359 (Main Venue) / via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
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Workshop
Third Workshop on Density Functional Theory: Fundamentals, Developments, and Applications (DFT2025)
March 25 (Tue) - 27 (Thu), 2025
The density functional theory (DFT) is one of the powerful methods to solve quantum many-body problems, which, in principle, gives the exact energy and density of the ground state. The accuracy of DFT is, in practice, determined by the accuracy of an energy density functional (EDF) since the exact EDF is still unknown. Currently, DFT has been used in many communities, including nuclear physics, quantum chemistry, and condensed matter physics, while the fundamental study of DFT, such as the first principle derivations of an accurate EDF and methods to calculate many observables from obtained densities and excited states, is still ongoing. However, there has been little opportunity to have interdisciplinary communication. On December 2022, we had the first workshop on this series (DFT2022) at Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto University, and several interdisciplinary discussions and collaborations were started. On February 2024, we had the second workshop on this series (DFT2024) at RIKEN Kobe Campus, and more stimulated discussion occured. To keep and extend collaborations, we organize the third workshop. Since the third workshop, we extend the scope of the workshop to the development and application of DFT as well. In this workshop, the current status and issues of each discipline will be shared towards solving these problems by meeting together among researchers in mathematics, nuclear physics, quantum chemistry, and condensed matter physics. This workshop mainly comprises lectures/seminars on cutting-edge topics and discussion, while sessions composed of contributed talks are also planned.
Venue: 8F, Integrated Innovation Building (IIB) / via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
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A Century of Quantum Mechanics
March 24 (Mon) at 14:00 - 15:30, 2025
Gordon Baym (Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois, USA)
This is a RIKEN iTHEMS - The Univ. of Tokyo, Phys. Dept. Joint Seminar. This year, 2025, the "International Year of Quantum Science and Technology (IYQ)," is the 100th anniversary of the "formal" start of quantum mechanics, the description of the microscopic world. 1925 is the year in which Werner Heisenberg and others formulated "matrix mechanics," and physicists began to understand how to accurately predict microscopic phenomena. In this talk I will describe how quantum mechanics came about, starting with physicists in the late nineteenth century trying to understand the colors of hot metals and other hot objects, noting crucial advances leading to the fully developed wave and matrix quantum mechanics in the mid 1920's, to steps towards understanding real materials, culminating with spectacular applications such as smartphones, scarcely a century later.
Venue: The Univ. of Tokyo, Faculty of Science Building #4, room 1220 (Main Venue) / via Zoom
Event Official Language: English
107 events in 2025
Events
Categories
series
- iTHEMS Colloquium
- MACS Colloquium
- iTHEMS Seminar
- iTHEMS Math Seminar
- DMWG Seminar
- iTHEMS Biology Seminar
- iTHEMS Theoretical Physics Seminar
- Information Theory Seminar
- Quantum Matter Seminar
- ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar
- Math-Phys Seminar
- Quantum Gravity Gatherings
- RIKEN Quantum Seminar
- Quantum Computation SG Seminar
- Asymptotics in Astrophysics Seminar
- NEW WG Seminar
- GW-EOS WG Seminar
- DEEP-IN Seminar
- ComSHeL Seminar
- Lab-Theory Standing Talks
- Math & Computer Seminar
- GWX-EOS Seminar
- Quantum Foundation Seminar
- QFT-core Seminar
- STAMP Seminar
- QuCoIn Seminar
- Academic-Industrial Innovation Lecture
- Number Theory Seminar
- Berkeley-iTHEMS Seminar
- iTHEMS-RNC Meson Science Lab. Joint Seminar
- RIKEN Quantum Lecture
- Theory of Operator Algebras
- iTHEMS Intensive Course-Evolution of Cooperation
- Introduction to Public-Key Cryptography
- Knot Theory
- iTHES Theoretical Science Colloquium
- SUURI-COOL Seminar
- iTHES Seminar