Wichtiger Hinweis / Important notice

Die Webseite www.ph.tum.de wurde am 31.03.2023 eingefroren. Mit dem Zusammenschluss der Fakultäten Chemie und Physik zur TUM School of Natural Scienes finden Sie aktuelle Informationen dort.

The website www.ph.tum.de was frozen on 31.03.2023. With the merger of the Faculties of Chemistry and Physics to form the TUM School of Natural Sciences, you will now find up-to-date information there.

https://www.nat.tum.de

Der Inhalt dieser Seite ist leider nur auf Englisch verfügbar.

Correlations in nuclei

How far can we go with density functional theory?

Festsymposium zum 75. Geburtstag von Prof. Dr. Peter Ring

Festsymposium zum 75. Geburtstag von Prof. Dr. Peter Ring

Venue

Thursday, 3 Nov 2016

Lecture hall of LMU in Garching
Am Coulombwall 1

Program

Download program (PDF, 307 kB)

Time  
10:00 Welcome
10:10
The relativistic description of nuclear structure between Beijing and Munich
Jie Meng, Peking University
10:45
Collective and single-particle phenomena in covariant density functional theory
Anatoli Afanasjev, Mississippi State University
11:20
Shape transitions in superheavy nuclei
Georgios Lalazissis, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
11:55
Sloppy nuclear energy density functionals: effective model optimization
Dario Vretenar, University of Zagreb
12:30 Noon break
14:00
Beyond the mean eld in the particle-vibration coupling scheme
Pierfrancesco Bortignon, Universita di Milano & INFN
14:35
Nuclear Density Functional theory and the nuclear equation of state
Gianluca Colo, Universita di Milano & INFN
15:10
Relativistic nuclear eld theory: from fundamental interactions to emergent phenomena
Elena Litvinova, Western Michigan University & NSCL, MSU
15:45 Coffee break
16:15
A view on exotic nuclei with beyond mean eld approaches
Luis Egido, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
16:50
Nuclear shapes in Monte Carlo Shell Model calculations
Takaharu Otsuka, University of Tokyo & CNS
17:25
Quartet condensation in nuclear systems and life on earth
Peter Schuck, Orsay & CNRS Universite Joseph Fourier, Grenoble
19:00 Bayerische Brotzeit

Kontakt

Prof. Dr. Norbert Kaiser
Technische Universität München
James-Franck-Str. 1
85748 Garching
Tel: +49 (89) 289 - 12367
Nach oben