Center for Nuclear Research


Fall 2002 / Spring 2003 Seminar Series


Fall 2002 Semester

Tuesday, 1 October 2002 Recent Advances in Dyson-Schwinger Studies
Michael Pichowsky
Kent State University
110 Smith Hall at 2:30 pm.
Tuesday, 29 October 2002 A QCD Based Quark Description of pi-pi Scattering.
Pieter Maris
North Carolina State University
110 Smith Hall at 2:30 pm.
Thursday, 7 November 2002 The Pion and the Nucleon, and QCD.
Craig Roberts
Argonne National Laboratory
110 Smith Hall at 2:30 pm.
Note the special date!
Tuesday, 12 November 2002 Saturation of Elliptic Flow and the HBT Puzzle at RHIC
Results from the MPC Parton Cascade

Denes Molnar
Ohio State University
110 Smith Hall at 2:30 pm.
Tuesday, 19 November 2002 A Semi-Classical Approach to Nuclear Collisions
Raju Venugopalan
Brookhaven National Laboratory
110 Smith Hall at 2:30 pm.
Tuesday, 3 December 2002 The Electric Form Factor of the Neutron at High Momentum Transfers
Bodo Reitz
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
110 Smith Hall at 2:30 pm.
Abstract

Spring 2003 Semester

Monday, 17 February 2003 A Simple Model for Valence Parton Distributions
J. Timothy Londergan
Indiana University
110 Smith Hall at 4:00 pm.
Thursday, 27 February 2003
Joint Colloqium/CNR Seminar
Strongly Interacting Finite Fermion Systems
James Vary
Iowa State University
110 Smith Hall at 4:00 pm.
Tuesday, 18 March 2003 Probing the Deconfined Phase with an Order Parameter Experimentally Accessible to RHIC
Apostolos Panagiotou
University of Athens
110 Smith Hall at 3:00 pm.
Tuesday, 29 April 2003 Multiparton Tomography of Hot and Cold Nuclear Matter
Ivan Vitev
Iowa State University
110 Smith Hall at 4:00 pm.
Friday, 2 May 2003 The Balance Function in STAR
Gary Westfall
Michigan State University
110 Smith Hall at 4:00 pm.

Go to the Center for Nuclear Research homepage.
See Department of Physics colloquium schedule, or
our previous semester's CNR seminar schedule.


For further information about CNR seminars contact
Xiaofei Zhang or Michael Pichowsky.
Driving directions to Kent State Physics Dept.