Before atomic elements came together, less than a second after the Big Bang, if particles condensed into halos of matter, these halos may then have collapsed, creating the first black holes, boson ...
Sounds can alter the way the brain interprets what it sees. This is the key finding of a new study by SISSA researchers in Trieste, published in PLOS Computational Biology. The research shows that, ...
The American Physical Society (APS) – the world’s largest organization of physicists – has awarded the 2026 Aneesur Rahman Prize for Computational Physics to Stefano Baroni, Professor of Condensed ...
The Orientation Day 2025 will take place on Friday, 14 November, starting at 9:30 a.m. in Room 128-129.During the event, the student representatives will offer an introduction to life at SISSA, ...
A new SISSA study, published in Physical Review Letters, clarifies a theoretical puzzle in a model system for strong interactions Understanding how matter reorganizes as its density increases is a ...
La lectio magistralis will be given by Niccolo Somaschi, CEO of Quandela The ceremony will be moderated by science communicator Davide Montesarchio. A simultaneous translation service will be ...
SISSA Colloquium returns on Monday, October 20th, at 2 PM in Aula Magna Budinich. This time, we will have the pleasure of hosting Professor Gábor Tamás (University of Szeged, Hungary) who will deliver ...
The magnetic fields that formed in the very early stages of the Universe, may have been billions of times weaker than a small fridge magnet, with strengths comparable to magnetism generated by neurons ...
They are called plectonemes. They are the analog of the twisted tangles of telephone cords, and can form in DNA that is pulled through a nanoscale channel. This is the finding of a study led by Ulrich ...