ERIK MCLEAN / UNSPLASH

Physikalisches Kolloquium

Freitag, 6. Juni 2025 17:00 Uhr  Neutron Stars, Quark-Gluon Plasma, and the Early Universe: Uncovering the Phases of the Strong Interaction in High-Energy Nuclear Collisions

Prof. Dr. Nu Xu, CCNU, China

What is matter made of, and how does it behave under the most extreme conditions in the Universe? In this talk, we’ll explore how the strong interaction—one of nature’s fundamental forces, described by Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD)—shapes the structure of everything from atomic nuclei to stars.

To understand how matter behaves at extreme temperatures and densities, scientists recreate these conditions in the lab using high-energy nuclear collisions. In such experiments, ordinary matter can melt into an exotic state known as the quark-gluon plasma (QGP)—a hot, dense "soup" where the building blocks of protons and neutrons, quarks and gluons, are free to move. This state of matter existed just microseconds after the Big Bang.

As the QGP cools, it transforms back into familiar particles in a smooth transition called a crossover. But at very high densities—like those found in the core of neutron stars—the transition is predicted to be much more dramatic, like water suddenly boiling into steam. The point where these two types of transitions meet is called the QCD critical point, a key missing piece in our understanding of the Universe and a major goal in modern nuclear physics.

In this colloquium, we’ll look at how cutting-edge experiments are helping us map the QCD phase diagram, revealing how matter behaves under these extreme conditions. We'll discuss recent findings on how matter expands in collisions, how certain quantum properties fluctuate, and what the production of rare particles like hypernuclei tells us about the inner structure of neutron stars. Finally, we’ll look ahead to the next generation of experiments, made possible by powerful new research facilities currently under construction around the world.

Teilchenkolloquium

NUCLEUS

Dr. Thierry Lasserre, Institute for Advanced Study, Technische Universität München

Astronomisches Kolloquium

Dienstag, 10. Juni 2025 16:30 Uhr  A new view of the red and distant Universe from JWST/NIRSpec

Anna de Graaff, MPIA In its three years of science operations, JWST has revolutionized our understanding of the early Universe. Arguably the most impressive leap forward has come from the NIRSpec instrument, providing a detailed view of the physical processes – star formation, feedback, and the growth of massive black holes – that shaped the faintest, reddest, and most distant galaxies. Among a wealth of discoveries, one overarching surprise has emerged: galaxies in the early Universe formed and matured extremely fast. Massive galaxies with old stellar populations exist already in the first billion years of the Universe, with some showing morphologies reminiscent of our own Milky Way, while others host unexpectedly massive black holes. The potential implications on galaxy formation models are profound, as current models struggle to reproduce such rapid galaxy assembly. I will present an overview of key extragalactic surveys from JWST/NIRSpec, focusing on the major discoveries that they have enabled and the challenges that remain.

Zentrum für Quantendynamik Kolloquium

Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2025 16:30 Uhr  Synthetic Polariton Matter: Hamiltonian Tomography and Optical Nonlinearities

Dr. Sylvain Ravets , Department of Photonics, Université Paris-Saclay Exciton-polaritons are hybrid quasiparticles arising from strong coupling between cavity photons and excitons in semiconductor quantum wells [1]. They offer a versatile platform for engineering synthetic photonic materials with tailored properties. In this talk, I will present recent progress in the design and characterization of polariton lattices, where microcavity pillars are arranged into 1D or 2D arrays to implement tight-binding Hamiltonians. I will first present a method for Hamiltonian engineering based on the patterning of coupled microcavities, and explain how this allows full control over the lattice geometry and hopping parameters. I will focus on a recently developed measurement technique that enables full reconstruction of the Bloch Hamiltonian, by analyzing the momentum-resolved emission spectra from the lattice. This optical tomography technique provides access to every Bloch mode across the entire Brillouin zone, and enables us to experimentally explore the quantum geometry and topology of polariton lattices. In the second part of the talk, I will explore how polariton-polariton interactions can be harnessed in such systems [1]. By exploiting the matter component of polaritons, we introduce interaction-induced control over the onsite energies. I will show how this enables the all-optical introduction of a vacancy in a Su–Schrieffer–Heeger (SSH) chain, creating a nonlinear interface for Bogoliubov excitations [2]. This result illustrates how interactions can lead to the emergence of new nonlinear topological phases in driven-dissipative systems [3]. These advances demonstrate the potential of polariton platforms to probe and control synthetic photonic materials. [1] I. Carusotto, and C. Ciuti, Rev. Mod. Phys. 85, 299 (2013) [2] Nicolas Pernet, et al., Nature Physics 18, 678 (2022) [3] D. Solnyshkov, et al., Optical Materials Express 11, Issue 4, 1119 (2021) Figure: FIG. 1. a. SEM image of a polariton honeycomb lattice, implementing a “photonic h-BN lattice”. b. Measured band structure, and c. experimentally reconstructed Berry curvature. Sylvain Ravets is a CNRS research scientist at the Centre for Nanosciences and Nanotechnology (C2N, CNRS / Université Paris-Saclay, France). His work explores hybrid light-matter systems, with a focus on engineering exciton-polaritons in semiconductor microcavities to study topological and quantum phenomena in synthetic photonic lattices. He earned his Ph.D. in physics in 2014 through a joint program between the Joint Quantum Institute (University of Maryland) and the Institut d’Optique, working on quantum engineering with cold atoms. He then joined ETH Zurich as a postdoctoral fellow, where he investigated solid-state quantum optics in the Institute of Quantum Electronics. Since joining CNRS in 2018, he has led an experimental program at the intersection of nanophotonics and quantum materials. He was awarded an ERC Starting Grant in 2020.