ERIK MCLEAN / UNSPLASH

Physikalisches Kolloquium

Freitag, 23. Januar 2026 17:00 Uhr  Symbolic AI for theoretical physics - two recent examples

Dr. François Charton, Axiom Math und Ecole des Ponts, Paris. Symbolic AI for theoretical physics - two recent examples Dr. François Charton Axiom Math und Ecole des Ponts, Paris Small language models can be trained on generated data to help build insight in theoretical physics. I present two recent works: understanding scattering amplitudes in planar N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory, and generating Calabi-Yau manifolds for string compactification.

Teilchenkolloquium

Three Decades of Dark Matter Annual Modulation Searches with NaI Detectors: Overview and Current Status of COSINUS

Prof. Dr. Karoline Schäffner, Max-Planck-Institut für Physik Garching Three Decades of Dark Matter Annual Modulation Searches with NaI Detectors: Overview and Current Status of COSINUS Prof. Dr. Karoline Schäffner Max-Planck Institut und TU / München - Garching The search for an annual modulation in the event rate induced by the Earth’s motion through the Galactic dark matter halo provides a powerful tool for discriminating potential dark matter signals from detector backgrounds. The DAMA/LIBRA experiment, a pioneer in exploiting this signature, has observed a modulated signal with very high statistical significance, exhibiting a period and phase consistent with dark matter expectations. However, these results remain in strong tension with the null results of most other direct detection experiments, and a fully model-independent experimental verification has still not been achieved. COSINUS aims to address this long-standing puzzle by operating sodium iodide crystals as cryogenic scintillating calorimeters. Compared to other NaI-based searches, COSINUS offers several distinctive features: a low nuclear-recoil energy threshold, superior energy resolution, and event-by-event particle identification. In this seminar, I will review the current global program of NaI-based dark matter searches and focus on the status of the COSINUS experiment. I will present recent results from the COSINUS prototype detector, describe the development of the dedicated lowbackground cryogenic facility at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory, and outline the ongoing commissioning toward the first physics data-taking campaign planned to start mid 2026. To conclude, I will discuss the remaining experimental challenges and the open questions that continue to keep this enduring puzzle unresolved.

Astronomisches Kolloquium

Dienstag, 27. Januar 2026 16:30 Uhr  The Growth of Supermassive Black Holes

Anna-Christina Eilers, MIT The discovery of billion-solar-mass black holes within the first Gigayear of cosmic history presents an intriguing puzzle: how did supermassive black holes (SMBHs) grow so rapidly in such a short amount of cosmic time? In this talk, I will introduce new approaches to probing the early growth of SMBHs. First, I will present the first measurement of the clustering strength of luminous quasars and their surrounding galaxies at z>6 using recent observations from the James Webb Space Telescope. These measurements allow us to infer the properties of the quasars’ host dark matter halos and their duty cycles, offering new insight into the environments that foster SMBH growth. I will then highlight new results from deep spectroscopic observations of background galaxies behind a luminous high-redshift quasar, which allow us to tomographically map the quasar’s ionized bubble, constraining the obscured fraction of quasars, their emission geometry, and the timescales of SMBH growth. To arrange a visit with the speaker during the visit, please contact their host: Nadine Neumayer

Zentrum für Quantendynamik Kolloquium

Donnerstag, 22. Januar 2026 13:30 Uhr  Design of subsystems for the integration of a quantum gas microscope

Gabriel Seigneur, Centrale Supélec, Paris Design of subsystems for the integration of a quantum gas microscope Gabriel Seigneur Centrale Supélec, Paris During my nine-month stay as a visiting student in the lithium-7 lab of Prof. Wolfgang Ketterle’s group at the MIT Center for Ultracold Atoms, I engaged in the installation project of a quantum gas microscope. This work included optimizing a 1064 nm light sheet, the fullstack design of a DMD illumination system, and additional technical projects such as testing vacuum components and offset-locking lasers to achieve high-field, spin-resolved Raman sideband cooling. I would be very happy to share my experience and engage in discussions. I feel fortunate to have gained a broad overview of the technical skills used in cold-atom experiments, and I am truly excited to further nurture my scientific curiosity through a PhD at Heidelberg University.