Steven Alan Orszag (February 27, 1943 – May 1, 2011) was an American mathematician. (Wikipedia).
Prime Minister and Minister of Research congratulates Avi Wigderson and László Lovász
Norwegian Prime Minister, Erna Solberg and Minister of Education and Research, Henrik Asheim, offer their congratulations to the Abel Prize laureates of 2021, Avi Wigderson and László Lovász.
From playlist László Lovász
Szemeredi--Trotter theorems in dimension 3 - János Kollár
János Kollár Princeton University; Member, School of Mathematics September 30, 2014 More videos on http://video.ias.edu
From playlist Mathematics
Murat Erdemsel & Sigrid Van Tilbeurgh - Vals
From playlist Tango
New corrections to mesoscopic level statistics for random band matrices - Laszlo Erdos
Laszlo Erdos IAS November 8, 2013 For more videos, please visit http://video.ias.edu
From playlist Mathematics
INTERVIEW AT CIRM: PETER SARNAK
Peter Sarnak is a South African-born mathematician with dual South-African and American nationalities. He has been Eugene Higgins Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University since 2002, succeeding Andrew Wiles, and is an editor of the Annals of Mathematics. He is known for his work in
From playlist Jean-Morlet Chair's guests - Interviews
Analysis of an instability in stratified fluid flow by Vishal Vasan
Summer school and Discussion Meeting on Buoyancy-driven flows DATE: 12 June 2017 to 20 June 2017 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS, Bengaluru Buoyancy plays a major role in the dynamics of atmosphere and interiors of planets and stars, as well as in engineering applications. This field
From playlist Summer school and Discussion Meeting on Buoyancy-driven flows
Kolmogorov theory of homogeneous isotropic turbulence... (Part 3) by J K Bhattacharjee
Summer school and Discussion Meeting on Buoyancy-driven flows DATE: 12 June 2017 to 20 June 2017 VENUE: Ramanujan Lecture Hall, ICTS, Bengaluru Buoyancy plays a major role in the dynamics of atmosphere and interiors of planets and stars, as well as in engineering applications. This field
From playlist Summer school and Discussion Meeting on Buoyancy-driven flows
Medical Device Failure, and How Data Can Help Us Prevent It
Things sometimes go wrong with airbags, food and drugs, prompting recalls. It can also happen with medical devices, though you'd think lifesaving devices like heart defibrillators or artificial hips would be closely monitored. But the data needed to systematically and rapidly identify dan
From playlist Healthcare Triage
Brian K. Kobilka: 2012 Nobel Prize Recipient in Chemistry Press Conference
Brian Kobilka, MD, professor and chair of molecular and cellular physiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, has received the 2012 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. He shares the prize with Robert Lefkowitz, MD, professor of biochemistry and of medicine at Duke University. The two m
From playlist Stanford News 2012
Gov 2.0 Summit 2010: Ellen Miller, "Open Government Scorecard"
http://gov2summit.com Ellen Miller (Sunlight Foundation), "Open Government Scorecard"
From playlist Gov 2.0 Summit 2010
Healthcare and Health Reform (November 17, 2009)
(November 17, 2009) Alan Garber, Professor of Medicine, of Economic, and of Health Research and Policy at Stanford, discusses many of the important policy questions relevant to the health care reform debate in the United States. Stanford Mini Med School is a series arranged and directed
From playlist Lecture Collection | Mini Med School
Quantum Physics and Universal Beauty - with Frank Wilczek
How simple questions inspired Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek’s groundbreaking work in quantum physics. Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe Frank's book "A Beautiful Question: Finding Nature's Deep Design" is available to purchase now - https://geni.us/Cz75S63 No
From playlist Ri Talks
The physics of timekeeping – with Chad Orzel
Explore the physics that makes time something we can set, measure and know with physicist Chad Orzel as he discusses time from orbital motion and axial tilt to the quantum mechanics and relativity theory that gives us our ultra-precise atomic clocks. Watch the Q&A: https://youtu.be/qIbSiU0
From playlist Ri Talks
Financial Theory (ECON 251) In this lecture we move from present values to dynamic present values. If interest rates evolve along the forward curve, then the present value of the remaining cash flows of any instrument will evolve in a predictable trajectory. The fastest way to compute
From playlist Financial Theory with John Geanakoplos
Aneesh Chopra interviewed at Gov 2.0 Summit 2010
Chopra serves as the Federal Chief Technology Officer. In this role, Chopra promotes technological innovation to help the country meet its goals from job creation, to reducing health-care costs, to protecting the homeland. Prior to his confirmation, he served as Virginia's Secretary of Tec
From playlist Gov 2.0 Summit 2010
Modern Poetry (ENGL 310) with Langdon Hammer Wallace Stevens is considered as an unapologetically Romantic poet of imagination. His search for meaning in a universe without religion in "Sunday Morning" is likened to Crane's energetic quest for meaning and symbol. In "The Poems of Our Clim
From playlist Modern Poetry with Langdon Hammer (ENGL 310)
Modern Poetry (ENGL 310) with Langdon Hammer The late poetry of Wallace Stevens is presented and analyzed. Stevens's conception of the poet as reader and the world as a text to be read and translated is considered in "Large Red Man Reading" and "The Poem that Took the Place of a Mountain.
From playlist Modern Poetry with Langdon Hammer (ENGL 310)
INTERVIEW AT CIRM : MICHAEL ARTIN
Michael ARTIN participated in the "Artin Approximation and Infinite dimensional Geometry" event organized at CIRM in March 2015, which was part of the Jean-Morlet semester held by Herwig Hauser. Michael Artin is an American mathematician and a professor emeritus in the Massachusetts Ins
From playlist Jean-Morlet Chair's guests - Interviews
Mark Rothko's No. 3/No. 13, 1949
Mark Rothko, No. 3/No. 13, 1949, oil on canvas (MoMA) Speakers: Dr. Beth Harris, Dr. Steven Zucker. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
From playlist Expressionism to Pop Art | Art History | Khan Academy