Volume 338

iTHEMS Weekly News Letter

Hot Topic

Lucy McNeill thumbnail

Farewell message from Lucy McNeill

2025-01-17

Our colleague Lucy McNeill has moved on to a new career as a Hakubi Assistant Professor at The Hakubi Center for Advanced Research, Kyoto University as of January 16, 2025. We all will miss her and wish her the best of luck in her latest endeavor.
Here is a message from Lucy McNeill:

During my 1 year at iTHEMS as a postdoctoral researcher, I was presented with opportunities to further both my own research and professional development at every turn. I am especially grateful for iTHEMS directors and colleagues' support in starting the "asymptotics in astrophysics" iTHEMS study group, ample chances to travel abroad to share my work, and the frequent international workshops organised at iTHEMS. In particular, workshops co-hosted with RIKEN-Berkeley left this lasting impression on me; that new stellar astrophysics and supernova physics paradigms are creatively and efficiently conceived when physicists, mathematicians and data scientists join forces to solve longstanding astrophysical puzzles. iTHEMS is such a special place where those necessary first interactions are regularly facilitated, and I am sad to leave. But... "I'll be back"!

Upcoming Events

Seminar

iTHEMS Math Seminar

Probabilistic approach to discrete integrable systems

January 17 (Fri) at 15:30 - 17:30, 2025

Makiko Sasada (Professor, Graduate School of Mathematical Sciences, The University of Tokyo)

The KdV equation and the Toda lattice are two central and widely studied examples of classical integrable systems, and many of their variations have been introduced to the present. In particular, the box-ball system (BBS) is a basic example of a discrete integrable system, which has been revealed to be an ultra-discrete version of the KdV equation and the Toda lattice. The BBS has been studied from various viewpoints such as tropical geometry, combinatorics, and cellular-automaton. As a new perspective, research on probabilistic approaches to this system has been rapidly expanding in recent years, including the application of the Pitman transform, analysis of invariant measures and its generalized hydrodynamics. More recently, we find that the application of the Pitman transform and the study of invariant measures of i.i.d.-type also work in the same manner for the discrete KdV equation and the discrete Toda lattice. Further research has begun on the relationship between the Yang-baxter maps and the existence of i.i.d.-type invariant measures for the discrete integrable systems. In this talk, I will introduce these new research topics that have been spreading over the past several years from the basics. This talk is based on several joint works with David Croydon, Tsuyoshi Kato, Satoshi Tsujimoto, Ryosuke Uozumi, Matteo Mucciconi, Tomohiro Sasamoto, Hayate Suda and Stefano Olla.

Venue: Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Biology Seminar

Quantitative Characterization of the Cellular Physical Properties to Understand the Organ Regeneration and Cancer Progression

January 23 (Thu) at 16:00 - 17:00, 2025

Takahisa Matsuzaki (Assistant Professor, Department of Applied Physics, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University / TechnoArena Associate Professor, Center for Future Innovation, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University)

Since the discovery of regulating the differentiation of "single" stem cells by extracellular mechanics, researchers have focused on the mechanobiology of single cells. Our collaborative studies provided the first breakthrough to identify optimal mechanics for multi-cellular, liver organogenesis (Takebe, .., Matsuzaki,.., Yoshikawa et al., Cell Stem Cell 2015, Stem Cell Reports 2018). My motivation is to be a pioneer internationally in understanding the role of heterogenic physical properties in multi-cellular related life-phenomena such as cancer cell adhesion (Matsuzaki et al., Phys Chem Chem Phys 2018, Bioconjugate Chem 2023, PNAS 2024, Osaka University Award 2024.), regeneration of colon/muscle (iScience 2022, Taniguchi,.., Matsuzaki et al., Mucosal Immunology 2023, J. Phys Chem Letter 2014, 2022, 2024.), and bone (Mizuno, .., Matsuzaki et al., Stem Cell Res. Ther. 2022, iScience 2024). In my presentation, I will overview the recent progress in developing fluorescence/interference microscopy combining atomic force microscopy (AFM), and its application to organ regeneration and cancer progression.

Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

Co-hosted by iTHEMS

Seminar Series for Junior and Senior High School Girls: 'What Should Students Prepare for Their Future in the Age of AI?'

January 25 (Sat) at 14:00 - 18:30, 2025

The RIKEN Center for Advanced Intelligence Project (AIP) and the Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences Program (iTHEMS) have jointly planned an event for junior and senior high school students interested in AI, mathematics, and information science. This event introduces the exciting research conducted by scientists in these fields.

Join us to explore “The Future Built with AI” and discover what steps students can take now to prepare for the future. We look forward to your participation!

For more details, please refer to the related links.

Venue: Nihonbashi AIP Center Open Space & Zoom (Hybrid Format)

Event Official Language: Japanese

Seminar

RIKEN Quantum Seminar

Architectures and algorithms for early FTQC

January 27 (Mon) at 16:00 - 17:15, 2025

Andreas Thomasen (R&D Engineer, QunaSys Inc.)

The NISQ era of quantum computing is characterized by quantum devices that have low error rates, but no error correction and typically on the order of 100 qubits, whereas the era of FTQC requires devices with full error correction facilitated by hundreds of thousands to millions of qubits for every logical qubit. Due to the distinct requirements and operating characteristics of these devices, algorithms and applications supported by NISQ and FTQC respectively are highly distinct as well. However, this leaves a large gap, both in terms of devices, algorithms and applications which exist in the intermediate regime where partial error correction is possible and the devices support on the order of tens of thousands of qubits.
In this seminar we will give a brief introduction to quantum computing for a non-specialist audience. We will then describe device architectures and algorithms that are specifically designed to fill this gap during the so-called early FTQC era. We will present the space-time efficient analogue rotation (STAR) architecture together with some algorithms that are well supported by it, namely quantum selected configuration interaction (QSCI) and statistical phase estimation (SPE).
This seminar serves as theoretical background for our QURI SDK hands-on session at a later date. The algorithms introduced are directly available as OSS as described in the link below.

Venue: #359, 3F, Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

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Quantum Computation SG Seminar

Quantum Error Mitigation

January 28 (Tue) - 29 (Wed), 2025

Suguru Endo (Ph.D. Researcher, Research Center for Theoretical Quantum Information, NTT Computer and Data Science Laboratories)

Note for registration [2024-12:24]:
We are sorry that the number of registration has reached the capacity of the lecture room. Thank you for your understanding.

Note for participants [2024-12:18]:
For participants, please register from the above form. We may limit the number of participants due to the capacity of the lecture room.
For participants in RIKEN who have already answered a questionnaire on this lecture, you do not have to register.

Program:
Day 1 (Jan. 28th)
10:30-12:00 Lecture 1
12:00-13:30 Lunch time
13:30-15:00 Lecture 2
15:00-15:30 Coffee break
15:30-17:00 Lecture 3

Day 2 (Jan. 29th)
10:30-12:00 Lecture 4
12:00-13:30 Lunch time
13:30-15:00 Lecture 5
15:00-15:30 Coffee break
15:30-17:00 Lecture 6

Abstract:
Quantum Error Mitigation (QEM) offers a practical approach to reducing errors in noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices without requiring the encoding of qubits. In this seminar, I will begin by discussing the fundamentals of noise modeling in quantum systems, followed by an overview of QEM techniques, including extrapolation, probabilistic error cancellation (PEC), virtual distillation, quantum subspace expansion, and Clifford data regression. Next, I will present advanced QEM methods, such as the stochastic PEC approach, which mitigates the effects of Lindblad terms in Lindblad master equations and the generalized quantum subspace expansion, which is a unified framework of QEM. I will also explore recent research on the information-theoretic analysis of QEM, shedding light on its fundamental limits and connections to non-Markovian dynamics. Furthermore, I will discuss studies combining QEM with quantum error correction to enhance the reliability of computations in the early fault-tolerant quantum computing era. Lastly, I will highlight the relevance of hybrid tensor networks, particularly their connections to quantum subspace expansion techniques.

Venue: #435-437, 4F, Main Research Building, RIKEN

Register: Event registration form

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Math Seminar

D-modules and the Riemann-Hilbert correspondence as a foundation for mixed Hodge modules

January 31 (Fri) at 14:00 - 16:00, 2025

Takahiro Saito (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Chuo University)

Algebraic analysis is a field which began with the study of differential equations in an algebraic framework, known as D-modules. The Riemann-Hilbert correspondence lies at the heart of this field, which bridges the worlds of analysis and geometry. Thanks to this, some geometric problems can be studied by using D-module theory, and vice versa. Based on D-module theory, Morihiko Saito introduced the concept of mixed Hodge modules, realizing Hodge theory on constructible sheaves, which brings us a functorial treatment of Hodge theory and various applications.

In this talk, we will begin with the linear differential equations on the complex plane and introduce monodromy, regularity and Deligne's Riemann-Hilbert correspondence. Then, as a generalization of it, I will explain the basics of the theory of D-modules and the Riemann-Hilbert correspondence. Finally, I will describe the role they play in the theory of Hodge modules and recent progress in this area.

For the audience's background knowledge, I will assume basic complex function theory. I will start with a simple example, so people outside the field are welcome.

Venue: #359 3F, Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

Information Theory SG Seminar

Introduction to the stochastic process and its application in physics

February 4 (Tue) - 5 (Wed), 2025

Kiyoshi Kanazawa (Associate Professor, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

The stochastic process is a popular tool for broad disciplines, such as physics, biophysics, chemistry, neuroscience, economics, and finance. In this lecture course, I will provide an elementary introduction to stochastic processes in physics without assuming rigorous background knowledge of probability theories. Most of the basic topics in stochastic processes will be covered in this lecture course, such as (1) the one-to-one correspondence between stochastic differential equations and master equations, (2) their standard forms, (3) Ito's lemma, and (4) the perturbation theories (the system-size expansion). I will also present its application to statistical physics, such as (5) kinetic theory and (6) a microscopic derivation of the Langevin equation from hard-sphere Hamiltonian dynamics in the dilute gas limit. My goal is to help the audience calculate most of the main calculations by their own hands by providing detailed explanations without abbreviations. This lecture is based on my Japanese notebook, available on my webpage (see the link below).

Schedule:
(Tue., Feb. 4) 13:00-14:30, 14:45-16:15, 16:30-18:00
(Wed., Feb. 5) 10:30-12:00, 13:00-14:30, 14:45-16:15

Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

Information Theory SG Seminar

Master equations for general non-Markovian processes: the Hawkes process and beyond

February 5 (Wed) at 16:30 - 18:00, 2025

Kiyoshi Kanazawa (Associate Professor, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

The Markovian process is one of the most important classes of stochastic processes. The Markovian process is defined as a stochastic process whose time evolution is independent of the system's entire history and has been extensively studied using the master equation and Fokker-Planck equation approaches. In contrast, non-Markovian processes -- where time evolution depends on the full history of the system -- have not been systematically explored, except for a few special cases, such as semi-Markovian processes. In this talk, we present a recent master-equation approach to general non-Markovian jump processes [1-4]. Beginning with a general non-Markovian jump process, we derive the corresponding master equation through a Markovian-embedding approach. The Markovian embedding is a scheme to add a sufficient number of auxiliary variables to convert a non-Markovian model to a high-dimensional Markovian model. For the case of our model, the one-dimensional non-Markovian model is shown to be equivalent to a Markovian stochastic field theory, and we derive the field master equation correspondingly [4]. As an application, we examine the nonlinear Hawkes process, a history-dependent and self-exciting model frequently used in studying complex systems [1-3]. Additionally, we explore the stochastic thermodynamic framework for general jump processes [5] as another example.

References

  1. K. Kanazawa and D. Sornette, Nonuniversal Power Law Distribution of Intensities of the Self-Excited Hawkes Process: A Field-Theoretical Approach, Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 138301 (2020), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.138301
  2. K. Kanazawa and D. Sornette, Ubiquitous Power Law Scaling in Nonlinear Self-Excited Hawkes Processes, Phys. Rev. Lett. 127, 188301 (2021), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.188301
  3. K. Kanazawa and D. Sornette, Asymptotic solutions to nonlinear Hawkes processes: A systematic classification of the steady-state solutions, Phys. Rev. Res. 5, 013067 (2023), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.5.013067
  4. K. Kanazawa and D. Sornette, Standard form of master equations for general non-Markovian jump processes: The Laplace-space embedding framework and asymptotic solution, Phys. Rev. Res. 6, 023270 (2024), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.6.023270
  5. K. Kanazawa and A. Dechant, in preparation

Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar

Fireworks in the cosmos: The Hidden Power of Nuclear Reactions

February 7 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:15, 2025

Irin Sultana (Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Physics, Central Michigan University, USA)

Neutron stars in low-mass X-ray binaries, accreting hydrogen- or helium-rich material from a companion star, frequently exhibit thermonuclear runaways on their surfaces known as Type-I X-ray bursts (XRBs). These bursts are powered by nuclear processes, such as the triple-$\alpha$ process, the $\alpha p$ process, and the rapid proton capture process, which play a critical role in model-observation comparisons. In this study, we investigate the impact of nuclear reaction uncertainties on XRBs using the ONEZONE model (Cyburt et al., 2016), considering different accreted compositions and accretion rates for the binary systems that are within the range of observed burst sources. The study is carried out in two stages. First, we determine the burst ignition conditions by simulating the settling of the accreted material with a full reaction network and a semi-analytical model. Second, we perform a sensitivity analysis by varying proton- and alpha-induced reaction rates in JINA REACLIBV2.2 within their estimated uncertainties. We explore the influence of these reactions on the XRBs light curve and the final abundances. The findings highlight key nuclear reactions that significantly affect XRB observables and the final abundances produced, offering guidance for future experimental efforts to improve our understanding of the uncertainties in the reaction rates involved in XRBs.

Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar

Investigating the Crust Urca Process in Accretion Neutron Stars: Implications for Superburst Ignition and Hot Cooling Curve of MAXI J0556-332

February 7 (Fri) at 16:00 - 17:15, 2025

Hao Huang (Ph.D. Student, Institute of Modern Physics, China)

This seminar investigates the Urca cooling strength of the 63Fe-63Mn pair, which varies due to uncertainties in the spin-parity of 63Fe, relevant to the Island of Inversion at N = 40. We present simulations that analyze the impact of this cooling mechanism on the thermal evolution of neutron star crusts, focusing on superburst ignition and anomalous hot quiescent phase cooling of MAXI J0556-332. Additionally, we explore the potential crust Urca process through the anomalous cooling curve of MAXI J0556-332, fitting observational data to determine neutron star mass and radius preferences. Preliminary results suggest that neutron stars with a crust Urca process tend to have smaller masses and larger radii, highlighting the need for precise β-decay measurements to further understand these phenomena.

Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

Pebbles in Planet Formation

February 10 (Mon) - 13 (Thu), 2025

Research on planet formation involves various approaches, including explorations of small solar system bodies, observations of protoplanetary disks, dust experiments, simulations, and theoretical studies. One of the primary objectives in this field is to develop a comprehensive theory that explains how kilometer-sized planetesimals form from micrometer-sized dust grains, drawing upon findings from these diverse research methods.

This workshop will focus on the concept of pebbles, which play a crucial role in the planet formation process. Pebbles — typically defined as solids ranging from millimeter to centimeter in size — are intermediate building blocks in planet formation, though their definition varies depending on the context. Assuming pebbles has led to theoretical advances in mechanisms such as streaming instability and pebble accretion, which promote the formation and growth of planetesimals. Additionally, pebbles have been linked to barriers against dust growth, such as the bouncing barrier. Furthermore, observations of protoplanetary disks have revealed the size distribution and porosity of solids, while the strength and thermal conductivity of comets obtained by the Rosetta mission suggest the accumulation of pebbles due to disk instabilities. However, inconsistencies have been pointed out between pebble formation and theories of dust growth.

This workshop aims to revisit and refine our understanding of solid materials implicated in planet formation, particularly in light of findings from solar system explorations and protoplanetary disk observations. We aim to reevaluate the definition and role of pebbles in the broader context of planet formation, with a special focus on the current challenges and open questions in the field. The workshop will include discussions of experiments and simulations of dust growth and collisions, and planetesimal formation mechanisms such as streaming instability. The workshop features keynote talks from the perspectives of explorations, observations, experiments, simulations, and theories, and we also call for presentations on related topics.

Venue: National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (Mitaka Campus) / via Zoom

Register: Event registration form

Event Official Language: English

Colloquium

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MACS Colloquium

MACS 10th Anniversary Colloquium & 2024 MACS Achievement Report Meeting

February 19 (Wed) at 14:45 - 18:30, 2025

Hiroshi Kokubu (Executive Vice-President, Kyoto University)
Yoshiko Takahashi (Professor, Division of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

14:45-15:00 Teatime discussion

[15:00-16:30 First part: MACS 10th Anniversary Colloquium]
15:05-15:05 Opening
15:05-15:30 Talk by Prof. Hiroshi KOKUBU
Title: How did MACS begin?
Abstract: As the MACS program, which began with a kick-off symposium in May 2016, enters its 10th year in the academic year 2025, I would like to look it back and talk about how it started, what thoughts shared by people involved at the time led to the spirit of MACS. I’d also like to share ideas and experiences in the history of MACS over the past 10 years, including what we wanted to do with MACS in the beginning but could not, or how MACS have collaborated with other subsequent activities of Kyodai RIGAKU (Kyoto U Science).
15:30-15:55 Talk by Prof. Yoshiko TAKAHASHI
Title: Excitement through the MACS program
Abstract: When the MACS program was launched, a research article was published by Harvard University, in which the gut looping during vertebrate development was beautifully explained by inter-disciplined science with experimental biology, physics, and mathematics. I was very impressed and motivated by this paper, and aimed at similar new waves through the MACS program. I have been running a study group, in which graduate- and undergrad students of not only life science but also physics and mathematics joined, and we enjoyed discussion and looking at real chicken embryos. Such experiences are not what we can easily obtain in conventional education program in campus life.

15:55-16:20 Discussion
16:20-16:30 Break

[16:30-18:30 Second part: 2024 MACS Achievement Report Meeting]
16:30-17:30 Flash Talks to report results
17:30-18:30 Poster Session by SG participating students

Venue: Science Seminar House (Map 9), Kyoto University

Event Official Language: Japanese

Seminar

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iTHEMS Theoretical Physics Seminar

How to define a Majorana fermion?

February 20 (Thu) at 13:00 - 14:30, 2025

Kazuo Fujikawa (Professor Emeritus, The University of Tokyo)

It is fundamental in particle physics if the neutrino is a Dirac fermion or a Majorana fermion, and the seesaw model gives naturally a Majorana
neutrino in an extension of the Standard Model. However, the commonly used chirality changing \(pseudo-C symmetry \) \(\nu^{\tilde C}_L=C\overline{\nu_L}^T\)
of a chiral fermion is not defined in Lagrangian field theory. Precisely speaking, the neutrinoless double beta decay is not described by the pseudo-C symmetry. The Majorana neutrino obtained after a Bogoliubov-type canonical transformation, which is the one originally defined by Majorana using a Dirac-type fermion, describes
consistently all the properties expected for the Majorana neutrino. Physical implication of this fact is briefly discussed.

Reference

  1. K. Fujikawa and A. Tunearu, Two classes of Majorana neutrinos in the seesaw model, Physics Letters, B858, 139064 (2024), doi: 10.48550/arXiv.2405.18702, arXiv: 2405.18702

Venue: #359, 3F, Seminar Room #359, 3F Main Research Building, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

iTHEMS Cosmology Forum 3 - (P)reheating the primordial Universe

March 4 (Tue) at 9:30 - 17:35, 2025

Seishi Enomoto (Postdoctoral Researcher, College of Engineering Science, Yokohama National University)
John T. Giblin (Professor, Department of Physics, Kenyon College, USA)
Kyohei Mukaida (Assistant Professor, Theory Center, High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK))

iTHEMS Cosmology Forum Workshop is a series of short workshops, each focusing on an emerging topics in cosmology. The target audience is cosmologists, high-energy physicists and astronomers interested in learning about the subject, not just those who have already worked on the topic. The goal of the workshop is to provide working knowledge of the topic and leave dedicated time for discussions to encourage mutual interactions among participants.

The third workshop is devoted to the 'reheating' phase of the early Universe. Reheating bridges the gap between the (almost) empty universe at the end of cosmic inflation and the thermal state of particles, required for Big-Bang nucleosynthesis, and the events of the hot Big-Bang model as a whole, to unfold. It is expected to proceed in different stages starting with a violent parametric resonant creation of particles, dubbed preheating, followed by a redistribution of energy leading to a thermal state. This phase potentially hosts rich phenomenology such as the formation of topoligical defects e.g. solitons, generation of gravitiational wave, and so on. Yet, the very non-linear nature of reheating makes it notoriously hard to describe analytically, and even numerical simulations struggle to follow the whole sequence of events in a given model. Reheating studies have thus yet to reach the degree of compherensiveness and universality that the understanding of cosmic inflation has achieved.

This forum will consist of two events. The first, on March 4th, will be in conference format comprising scientific talks on research trends in (P)Reheating. The second, on March 5th, will be a tutorial on numerical aspects of reheating (both theory and hands-on with code) hosted by Tom Giblin of Kenyon College.

The workshop will be in English.

The workshops are organised by the iTHEMS Cosmology Forum working group, which is the successor of the Dark Matter Working Group at RIKEN iTHEMS.

Important dates:
Feb. 25th - Registration deadline
March 4th - Workshop Day
March 5th - Tutorial Day

Invited Speakers:
John T. Giblin - Kenyon College
Kyohei Mukaida - KEK
Seishi Enomoto - Yokohama National University

Organisers:
Kohei Hayashi, Nagisa Hiroshima, Derek Inman, Amaury Micheli, Ryo Namba

Venue: #435-437, 4F, Main Research Building, RIKEN

Register: Event registration form

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

Integrated Innovation Building (IIB) venue photo

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), Kobe Campus, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Paper of the Week

Week 3, January 2025

2025-01-16

Title: Direct Monte Carlo computation of the 't~Hooft partition function
Author: Okuto Morikawa, Hiroshi Suzuki
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2501.07042v1

Title: Impact of dark matter distribution on neutron star properties
Author: Ankit Kumar, Hajime Sotani
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2501.07052v1

Title: Physics-Driven Learning for Inverse Problems in Quantum Chromodynamics
Author: Gert Aarts, Kenji Fukushima, Tetsuo Hatsuda, Andreas Ipp, Shuzhe Shi, Lingxiao Wang, Kai Zhou
Journal Reference: Nature Reviews Physics (2025)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s42254-024-00798-x
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2501.05580v1

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