Neutrinos

Bert and Ernie (neutrinos)

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Why I Love Neutrinos

Why I Love Neutrinos is a series spotlighting those mysterious, abundant, ghostly particles that are all around us. This installment features a compilation of international scientists. For more information on neutrinos, visit the Fermilab website at http://www.fnal.gov.

From playlist Why I Love Neutrinos

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Do sterile neutrinos exist? | Even Bananas

We interrupt your regularly scheduled #EvenBananas with this edition of Particle/Counter Particle. In this science debate show, two physicists discuss the possible existence of "sterile neutrinos," a theorized fourth kind of neutrino. If sterile neutrinos exist, it would be a radical disco

From playlist Neutrinos

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RubyConf 2009 - BERT and Ernie: Scaling your Ruby site with Erlang by Tom Preston-Werner

Help us caption & translate this video! http://amara.org/v/GYfe/

From playlist RubyConf 2009

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Stanford CS224N NLP with Deep Learning | Winter 2021 | Lecture 15 - Add Knowledge to Language Models

For more information about Stanford's Artificial Intelligence professional and graduate programs visit: https://stanford.io/31fNyFN To learn more about this course visit: https://online.stanford.edu/courses/cs224n-natural-language-processing-deep-learning To follow along with the course

From playlist Stanford CS224N: Natural Language Processing with Deep Learning | Winter 2021

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What are Neutrinos?

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From playlist Science Unplugged: Neutrinos

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Why I Love Neutrinos - Mark Thomson

Why I Love Neutrinos is a series spotlighting those mysterious, abundant, ghostly particles that are all around us. This installment features Mark Thomson, professor of physics at the University of Cambridge. For more information on neutrinos, visit the Fermilab website at http://www.fnal.

From playlist Why I Love Neutrinos

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MegaFavNumbers 8,243,721

#MegaFavNumbers Bert and Ernie numbers

From playlist MegaFavNumbers

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Neutrinos and the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics - Sixty Symbols

The 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics goes to Takaaki Kajita and Arthur B. McDonald for showing that Neutrinos have mass. More Nobel winners: http://bit.ly/SSNobel This video features Ed Copeland, Michael Merrifield and Meghan Gray. More Neutrino videos: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=

From playlist Nobel Prize Videos - Sixty Symbols

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Sterile neutrinos and seesaws

Time and again, the study of neutrinos has confounded scientists. One very peculiar property of neutrinos is that only neutrinos with a specific spin configuration have been observed. In this video, Fermilab’s Dr. Don Lincoln talks about this and lays out the possibility that other types

From playlist Neutrinos

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Irene Di Palma - A Machine Learning Application in Multi-Messenger Astrophysics - IPAM at UCLA

Recorded 7 October 2021. Irene Di Palma of the Sapienza University of Rome presents "A Machine Learning Application in Multi-Messenger Astrophysics" at IPAM's Workshop I: Computational Challenges in Multi-Messenger Astrophysics. Abstract: The detection of gravitational waves from core-coll

From playlist Workshop: Computational Challenges in Multi-Messenger Astrophysics

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Neutrinos: Nature's Identity Thieves?

The oscillation of neutrinos from one variety to another has long been suspected, but was confirmed only about 15 years ago. In order for these oscillations to occur, neutrinos must have a mass, no matter how slight. Since neutrinos have long been thought to be massless, in a very real w

From playlist Neutrinos

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New Astronomy - Exploiting the Neutrino

Speaker: Steven W. Barwick Recorded on January 20, 2015. The ARIANNA team braves the fierce wind chill of Antarctica to capture one of science’s most elusive prey: ghostly particles called neutrinos that could carry secrets from the depths of the universe. With its planned 1,296 detector

From playlist Physical Sciences Breakfast Lecture Series

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Neutrinos: Messengers from a Violent Universe

In this 45-minute presentation Alex Himmel, Wilson Fellow at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, explains how neutrinos might provide the answers to many questions that scientists have about the universe. The neutrino is a type of subatomic particle. They are produced in copious quantit

From playlist Neutrinos

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Adam Savage Tours the Jim Henson Exhibition!

Adam Savage visits the Museum of the Moving Image, which recently opened a landmark exhibition showcasing the works of Jim Henson. From the Muppet Show to Sesame Street and Fraggle Rock to the Dark Crystal, we get up close with many of the puppets, props, and film artifacts from Henson's w

From playlist Puppets!

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A brief history of the Transformer architecture in NLP

🏛️ The Transformer architecture has revolutionized Natural Language Processing, being capable to beat the state-of-the-art on overwhelmingly numerous tasks! Check out this video for a brief history of the Transformer development. Related video: How do we check if a neural network has lear

From playlist The Transformer explained by Ms. Coffee Bean

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Ernie 2.0: A Continual Pre-Training Framework for Language Understanding | AISC

For slides and more information on the paper, visit https://aisc.ai.science/events/3919-09-03 Discussion lead: Royal Sequeira Motivation: Recently, pre-trained models have achieved state-of-the-art results in various language understanding tasks, which indicates that pre-training on la

From playlist Natural Language Processing

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Neutrinos: Nature's Ghosts?

Dr. Don Lincoln introduces one of the most fascinating inhabitants of the subatomic realm: the neutrino. Neutrinos are ghosts of the microworld, almost not interacting at all. In this video, he describes some of their properties and how they were discovered. Studies of neutrinos are exp

From playlist Neutrinos

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Rasa Paper Reading: A Primer in BERTology (Part 2)

This week we're doing something a little different with our livestream: we'll be reading a paper together! The paper is "A Primer in BERTology: What we know about how BERT works" by Anna Rogers, Olga Kovaleva, Anna Rumshisky. Link: https://arxiv.org/abs/2002.12327 What's livecoding? It's

From playlist Rasa Reading Group

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Why I Love Neutrinos - Elena Gramellini

Why I Love Neutrinos is a series spotlighting those mysterious, abundant, ghostly particles that are all around us. This installment features Yale Graduate Student Elena Gramellini. For more information on neutrinos, visit the Fermilab website at http://www.fnal.gov.

From playlist Why I Love Neutrinos

Related pages

IceCube Neutrino Observatory