The search for the infinitely small is closely linked to the study of the extremely distant. What are the ultimate components of the matter surrounding us? What are the laws that define its conduct? Accelerators, like giant and enormously powerful microscopes, help us to see more clearly and to try to come up with answers to those questions.
Livia Soffi, Lecturer in calculus laboratory, Deparment of Physics, Rome Sapienza University - Faculty of Mathematical, Physical and Natural Sciences – INFN, and research fellow with the National Institute of Nuclear Physics. Member of the Compact Muon Solenoid collaboration at the LHC in Geneva. Coordinator of numerous INFN popularisation activities.
Reservation for Sapienza students
Informazioni
Students from Rome's Sapienza University are required to reserve their place (40 places available for each lecture, admission free). Visitors to the exhibitions may also attend the lectures while places last. Broadcast in live streaming on this web page
Palazzo delle Esposizioni – Rotonda
via Nazionale 194, Roma