Volume 63
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iTHEMS Advisory Council (AC) is being held from July 24 (Wed.) through 26 (Fri.)
2019-07-26
iTHEMS Advisory Council (AC) is being held from July 24 (Wed.) through 26 (Fri.). On July 25 (Thursday), short talks and poster presentations by iTHEMS researchers have been given, followed by stimulating discussions with the AC members in various different fields (mathematics, physics, astronomy, biology and engineering).
Lively discussion continued during the breaks and poster sessions, with beautiful sweets and coffee/tea prepared by iTHEMS assistants. We are very grateful to the AC members who kindly came over to RIKEN Wako Campus to make precious suggestions
about science activities and the management of iTHEMS.
Upcoming Events
Workshop
Co-hosted by iTHEMSSUURI-COOL (Kyoto)
RIMS-iTHEMS joint WS on "Math of Jets"
July 29 (Mon) - 31 (Wed), 2019
Co-hosted by RIMS Kyoto University and iTHEMS RIKEN.
Venue: Kyoto University, Main Campus Research Bldg No 15, #201
Event Official Language: Japanese
Seminar
iTHEMS Math Seminar
Complex analysis on a neighborhood of a complex submanifold and its applications
July 30 (Tue) at 16:00 - 18:10, 2019
Takayuki Koike (Lecturer, Department of Mathematics, Graduate School of Science, Osaka City University)
Plan of the seminar: we separate each talk into two. In the first 60 minutes the speaker gives an introductory talk for non-mathematicians. After a short break, the second 60 minutes is spent for a bit more detailed talk for mathematicians (working in other areas). We welcome you joining both parts of the seminar or only the first/second half.
Abstract:
We explain our recent study on the complex analytic structure of a small tubular neighborhood of a complex submanifold, which is based on T. Ueda's classification theory. We also explain how to apply them to: (i) a study on (non-) existence of a smooth Hermitian metric on a nef line bundle over a projective manifold with semi-positive curvature, and (ii) a study on non-projective and non-Kummer K3 surfaces.
Venue: Seminar Room #160, 1F Main Research Building, RIKEN
Event Official Language: English
Lecture
SUURI-COOL (Kyushu)
SUURI-COOL (Kyushu) Lecture
July 31 (Wed) - August 2 (Fri), 2019
Takumi Doi (Senior Research Scientist, iTHEMS / Senior Research Scientist, Quantum Hadron Physics Laboratory, RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science (RNC))
SUURI-COOL (Kyushu) at the Ito-campus of Kyushu Univ. will be launched on July 31, 2019. As a first event at SUURI-COOL (Kyushu), the following lecture by Takumi Doi (RIKEN Nishina Center/iTHEMS) will be held. Feel free to join if you will be around Ito-campus.
Nuclei, many-body systems of baryons as protons and neutrons, are ultimately consist of elementary particles of quarks and gluons and their properties are governed by quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Recently, a new theoretical method is developing in lattice QCD, the first-principles calculation of QCD, and the new era is dawning where nuclear physics is constructed directly based on QCD. In this lecture, I first introduce the formulation of lattice QCD.
I will then discuss the theoretical foundation and the latest numerical results about the lattice QCD study of hadron interactions, the key quantities to construct nuclear physics from QCD. I will also give a lecture on computational science, in particular, about supercomputers.
Venue: SUURI-COOL (Kyushu), Ito Campus, Kyushu University
Event Official Language: English
Workshop
Math-Life Workshop
August 19 (Mon) - 20 (Tue), 2019
Organizers
Masaharu Nagayama (MSC, Hokkaido Univ.)
Tetsuo Hatsuda (iTHEMS, RIKEN)
Hiroshi Suito (AIMR, Tohoku Univ.)
Takayuki Sakajyo (SACRA, Kyoto Univ.)
Venue: 1F Seminar Room, Frontier Research in Applied Sciences Building, Hokkaido Univ.
Event Official Language: Japanese
Featured Paper of the Week
Synthetic dimensions and topological chiral currents in mesoscopic rings
2019-07-22
In condensed matter systems, the topological effect of chiral currents is intimately related to two-dimensional systems. Recently emerging concept of "synthetic dimensions" provides a way to explore two-dimensional physics using one dimensional setups by using internal degrees of freedom as an additional dimension. Synthetic dimensions have so far been predominantly developed in atomic and optical physics. In this work, we extend this concept to condensed matter systems of a mesoscopic ring coupled to a nanomagnet. Regarding the spin degrees of freedom of a nanomagnet as a dimension, we interpret a current in the ring, which is locked to the nanomagnet's spin, as chiral edge currents of a two-dimensional quantum Hall system. We thus provide a broader conceptual setting for synthetic dimensions, extending it to a rich domain of potential practical applications in condensed matter systems.
Reference:
Hannah M. Price, Tomoki Ozawa, Henning Schomerus
"Synthetic dimensions and topological chiral currents in mesoscopic rings"
Phys. Rev. Research 2, 032017 (2020)
doi: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.032017
arXiv: 1907.04231
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