Complex Systems Studies – Telegram
Complex Systems Studies
2.43K subscribers
1.55K photos
125 videos
116 files
4.54K links
What's up in Complexity Science?!
Check out here:

@ComplexSys

#complexity #complex_systems #networks #network_science

📨 Contact us: @carimi
Download Telegram
سرنوشت علم: از فلسفه طبیعی تا نظریه پیچیدگی
ارائه‌ای برای بچه‌های دبیرستانی

🔗 http://www.sitpor.org/2019/05/intro-to-complexity-arg/

🎧 https://soundcloud.com/adiohysics/ckqc6widutmq
🎞 Lecture series on applied machine learning (sklearn, keras) at @DSI_Columbia was just concluded with a guest lecture by @hug_nicolas.

You can find all slides on the class website under CC-0 license https://t.co/chncF7em3j,

and all lectures on youtube: https://t.co/v8Z8yzGOTA
Anyone interested in a phd on big-data-driven modelling of complex environmental systems (e.g. multiplexes of natural resources users in river basins) please contact me at roger.cremades@hzg.de, please do send it to potentially interested friends 👍🏿
Forwarded from Complex Networks (SBU)
#سمینارهای_هفتگی
مرکز شبکه‌های پیچیده و علم‌داده اجتماعی دانشگاه شهید بهشتی (CCNSD)

برای یک شبیه‌سازی موفق چه چیزهایی غیر از زبان‌‌های برنامه‌نویسی را باید بدانیم؟

🗣 بابک اسعدی - دانشگاه شهیدبهشتی

دوشنبه، ۱۶ اردیبهشت ساعت ۱۶:۰۰
🏛 محل برگزاری: سالن ابن‌هیثم


‍~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

⭕️ مشتاق دیدار همه اقشار جامعه در مرکز هستیم. برای هماهنگی‌ با مسئول جلسه‌ می‌توانید با آقای محمد شرافتی ‌تماس بگیرید:‍‍‍‍
📞 @herman1

—————————————
🕸 مرکز شبکه‌های پیچیده و علم داده اجتماعی دانشگاه شهید بهشتی

🕸 @CCNSD 🔗 ccnsd.ir
—————————————
Origins of Life course is now open for enrollment! Free and open to everyone - Class starts June 14 -

http://origins.complexityexplorer.org


Syllabus
Introduction
Chemical Origins
Chemical Comminalities
Early Life
Evolution
Astrobiology & General Outlook


#originsoflife
همایش «دانشنامهٔ آزاد ویکی‌پدیا و نقش اجتماعی دانشگاه در عرصهٔ عمومی علم»

سخنرانان:
دکتر ناصر فکوهی
آرش امامی
عباس کریمی
دبیر علمی نشست:دکتر زهیر صیامیان

یک شنبه ۱۵ اردیبهشت ماه
دانشکده ادبیات و علوم انسانی دانشگاه شهید بهشتی

@akhbartarikh
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
⭕️ خبری در راه است!

🦠 گردهمایی "سیستم‌های پیچیده" ژرفا
🌀 ۲۴ اردیبهشت‌ماه
📍 دانشگاه صنعتی شریف

منتظر خبرهای تکمیلی باشید...

🆔 @Zharfa90
On Turbulence and Geometry
from Nash to Onsager [PDF] https://t.co/SNS5pD9ZZl
💰 new postdoc opening on "Statistical Inference & Learning: Mathematical & Algorithmic Aspects" in our department at ICTP

https://t.co/NCbPvLwmTQ
🦠 ۲۵امین گردهمایی ژرفا: "سیستم‌های پیچیده"
🔻 ۲۴ اردیبهشت‌ماه
📍 دانشگاه صنعتی شریف

خبرهای خوبی در راه است! منتظر باشید...

🆔 ژرفا، فیزیک، همبند، شناسا
PostDoc Position to study "What do the 'people' want?"!
https://t.co/wL7QGKNgW2
Balance in signed networks
Alec Kirkley, George T. Cantwell, and M. E. J. Newman
Phys. Rev. E 99, 012320 – Published 22 January 2019

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1809.05140
🎞 Entropy: Gaining Knowledge by Admitting Ignorance

🔗 http://media.podcasts.ox.ac.uk/physics/general/2018-11-17-physics-theoretical-schekochihin-1.mp4

Alexander Schekochihin, Professor of Theoretical Physics, gives a talk on entropy.

When dealing with physical systems that contain many degrees of freedom, a researcher's most consequential realisation is of the enormous amount of detailed information about them that she does not have, and has no hope of obtaining. It turns out that this vast ignorance is not a curse but a blessing: by admitting ignorance and constructing a systematic way of making fair predictions about the system that rely only on the information that one has and on nothing else, one can get surprisingly far in describing the natural world. In an approach anticipated by Boltzmann and Gibbs and given mathematical foundation by Shannon, entropy emerges as a mathematical measure of our uncertainty about large systems and, paradoxically, a way to describe their likely behaviour—and even, some argue, the ultimate fate of the Universe. Alex Schekochihin will admit ignorance and attempt to impart some knowledge.
🎞 Magnets, superfluids and superconductors

🔗 http://media.podcasts.ox.ac.uk/physics/general/2016-10-29-theoretical-physics-2-720p.mp4

Second lecture "#More_is_different" - how states of matter emerge from quantum theory Saturday morning of Theoretical Physics. With Professor Fabian Essler, introduction by Professor John Wheeler.

Fabian Essler will discuss the hugely successful framework for classifying possible states of quantum matter, pioneered by the great Russian Nobel Laureate, Lev Landau. This framework is conceptually remarkably simple, but is broad enough to describe physics ranging from magnets to superconductors to fundamental physics in the guise of relativistic quantum field theory and the Higgs phenomenon.
More on this mini-series;
The properties of all forms of matter, from the most mundane to the most exotic kinds produced in advanced laboratories, are consequences of the laws of quantum mechanics. Understanding how macroscopic behaviour emerges from microscopic laws in a system of many particles is one of the intellectually most demanding, yet most important, challenges of physics, and is the subject of this series of lectures.