Cosmologists at Perimeter Institute seek to help pin down the constituents and history of our universe, and the rules governing its origin and evolution. Many of the most interesting clues about physics beyond the standard model (e.g., dark matter, dark energy, the matter/anti-matter asymmetry, and the spectrum of primordial density perturbations], come from cosmological observations, and cosmological observations are often the best way to test or constrain a proposed modification of the laws of nature, since such observations can probe length scales, time scales, and energy scales that are beyond the reach of terrestrial laboratories.
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Università degli Studi di Genova (UniGe)
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Quantum Sine-Gordon model in perturbative AQFT
University of Göttingen -
The Holographic Landscape of Symmetric Product Orbifolds
University of Cambridge -
Tabletop Insights into Quantum Gravity?
King's College London -
Gravitational Waves: the theorist's swiss knife
King's College London -
General Relativity for Cosmology - Lecture 20
University of Waterloo -
We Don’t Live on Spatial Hypersurfaces, so Why Should Quantum Fields?
Dublin Institute For Advanced Studies -
A possible causality-condition for causal sets: persistence of zero
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics -
Angular momentum flux in Einstein-Maxwell theory
Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen -
Neutrino mass and cosmic flows
National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences -
The power of diversity - or why linking quantum gravity approaches could matter
University of Southern Denmark -
Implications of the Quantum Nature Space-time for the Big Bang and Black Holes
Pennsylvania State University