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Displaying from Friday, November 05, 2021
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November 2021
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Friday 05 |
Socialising your research can be a great way to increase visibility of your work and publications and lead to increased collaborations and citations. As well as using both UWA's and your own social media networks, 'socialising' your research also encompasses other online exposure. Come and learn (...)
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April 2022
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Thursday 28 |
16:00 - PUBLIC TALK - Maths & Stats Colloquium : Deciding that two groups are the same: an update on group isomorphism
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Groups are mathematical objects that abstractly capture the concept of symmetry. Two groups are isomorphic if they essentially describe the same data, but they might be given with respect to different frames of reference. More specifically, two groups are isomorphic if there is a 1-to-1 (...)
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August 2022
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Thursday 11 |
16:00 - PUBLIC LECTURE - Maths & Stats Colloquium : A qualitative guide to chaos
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Colloquium followed by refreshments in Monadelphous Integrated Learning Centre
Applied mathematics involves building models of the real world. When those models consist of differential equations (as they very often do) one can seek to do one of two things: (1) make approximations that (...)
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September 2022
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Wednesday 21 |
13:30 - SEMINAR - The Birth of Gravitational Wave Astronomy : 2020 Prime Minister's Prize for Science recipients meet at UWA to describe their work, and the future of gravitational wave astronomy.
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Three graduates of the School of Physics, Mathematics and Computer Science, Professors Peter Veitch, David McClelland and David Blair were recipients of the 2020 Prime Minister’s Science Prize for the Discovery of Gravitational Waves. It is a great pleasure to have them all together on campus (...)
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Thursday 22 |
15:00 - Floor Talk & Panel Discussion - Meet the Creators & Thinkers : Join WA artist Mark Grey-Smith, cosmologist Regents' Professor Paul Davies AM, Professor Tamara Davis AM, astrophysicist and UWA Emeritus Professor David Blair for an informal floor talk and panel discussion. Bring your questions!
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New ideas and new discoveries have changed our view of space and time, the very fabric of the universe. The changes began a century ago when the Wallal Eclipse in Western Australia proved that space is elastic and flexible.
Join WA artist Mark Grey-Smith, cosmologist Regents' Professor (...)
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