Previous events - Page 5
Title: Reduced complexity climate models for robust policy-relevant climate projections
Speaker: Chris Smith, University of Leeds
Doctoral candidate Markus Herberg Hovd at the Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis "Clinical pharmacometrics with diagnostic probes. Non-parametric techniques in pharmacokinetic studies" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Welcome to our dScience lunch seminar in the Science Library with Hedvig Nordeng.
In the global effort to combat climate change, wind energy is of paramount importance in transitioning away from fossil fuels. But wind power comes with a challenge: It is not always blowing when we need it.
Doctoral candidate Justyna Czekirda at the Department of Geosciences, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis Ground thermal regime and periglacial slope processes in Norway and Iceland for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Doctoral candidate Hussain Shakeel Butt at the Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis "Characterization of novel polysaccharides and polyphenols in selected Nordic medicinal plants identified through historical sources" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Hvordan samspill mellom det biologiske miljøet og genetiske faktorer påvirker mental helse.
At the meeting we will provide you with information about studying at UiO, and how to prepare for your arrival in August.
Doctoral candidate Øystein Færder at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis "The role of resistivity in plasmoid-mediated reconnection in the solar corona and its observational imprints" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Late Lunch Talk by Iris Bea Ramiro
The AtLAST conference will be held in-person in Mainz, Germany, from 21 to 24 May 2024.
This spring, two student groups designed their own mission, built the hardware and software, integrated and tested their devices, before launching their equipment on weather balloons at Andøya.
The REPEAT group (PIs: Kjetill S. Jakobsen and Melinka A. Butenko) are interested in the functional and evolutionary importance of short tandem repeats in genomes. Short tandem repeats are common, but hypermutable regions. This leads to a high number of short tandem repeat variants in a population. We have combined population genomics and experimental approaches to study the impact of short tandem repeat alleles in Arabidopsis, with emphasis on their role in gene regulation and how they impact protein function. Based on our findings from Arabidopsis, we conducted a study of repeats across 1,270 species, including animal, fungal, plant, and other eukaryotic genomes. In this seminar I will present the results from this (recently submitted) study.
NB: NEW DATE MAY 16.
Welcome to our weekly lunch seminar held in the dScience lounge area with Øyvind Christiansen.
Maria Markova will defend her thesis "Approaching the pygmy dipole resonance in Sn isotopes with the Oslo method" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor at the University of Oslo, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences.
PhD Georgios Kavallieratos will hold his trial lecture at the Department of Technology Systems as part of the recruitment of an associate professor position for Security in Cyberphysical systems.
C*-algebra seminar by Eduard Vilalta (Chalmers University of Technology / University of Gothenburg)
This workshop will feature talks from esteemed scientists, covering topics such as zoonoses, spread of infectious diseases, animal movement and more. Registration to attend the event at the Academy is closed, but you can follow the event via streaming.
At this seminar there will be three 30 minute lectures by Peter Hudson, Ottar N. Bjørnstad, and Andy Dobson. Organized by CEES & Centre for Pandemics and One-Health Research (P1H). The seminar is open for all.
By Sonia Altizer, Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens GA, USA. The seminar is open for all.
Workshop.
Doctoral candidate Annie Elisabeth Jerkins at the Department of Geosciences, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis Improved Understanding of Seismicity in the North Sea for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.