Cambridge's Youngest Lecturer, Deyan Mihaylov, Explains Gravitational Waves at Ratio Conference
On March 5, the audience of the next Ratio event will learn more about one of the most important physical discoveries in the last century - gravitational waves
Back in the distant 1916 Albert Einstein predicts that gravitational waves are the primary way of transmitting energy into space. It takes a hundred years for science to find evidence to support this theory, and in 2016, from the LIGO Observatory, announced that they had registered a gravity wave for the first time.
Why is it so difficult to detect gravity waves? What can we learn about the universe thanks to them? These and other physics questions will find their answers and the "Ratio Presents: The Gravitational Waves - A Window to the Universe" event on March 5th.
Guests will learn what gravitational waves are, how they are detected, and what are the latest methods and patterns for detecting the phenomenon. The initial discovery and continuous observation of gravitational waves reveal many horizons in the future of astronomy and complement our understanding of the universe.
Deyan Mihaylov will tell us about the secrets of the cosmos, which the gravitational waves reveal to us. He graduated in Physics at Oxford. His education continued in Cambridge, where he completed a master's degree and doctoral studies related to the study of the fundamental laws of physics with gravitational waves. In 2015 he became the youngest lecturer in Cambridge - as soon as his magistrate began.
Currently, Deyan Mihaylov continues to develop his research projects, and in the meantime he establishes two companies - the one in the UK dealing with quantum technologies, becoming the first company in Europe to produce quantum computer software and the other IT company in Bulgaria. On March 5, the...
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