CERN Lectures
CERN Lectures features talks, seminars, lectures, and other formats, given at CERN. It includes the two prestigious series: CERN Academic Training Lectures and the CERN Colloquia.
CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, is one of the world's largest and most respected centres for scientific research. Its business is fundamental physics, finding out what the Universe is made of and how it works. At CERN, the world's largest and most complex scientific instruments are used to study the basic constituents of matter — the fundamental particles. By studying what happens when these particles collide, physicists learn about the laws of Nature.
For general CERN videos, please visit https://www.youtube.com/c/CERN

Paul Vixie, QUIC Transport Protocol Performance and Security Considerations , Lecture 1/1

Stefano Zacchiroli, Open Science Best Practices for Source Code Preservation, Lecture 4/5

Paula Grzegorzewska, How to maximise the impact of Open Source projects on innovations, Lecture 5/5

Jenny Molloy, Open Source in Intellectual Property for innovation in biotechnology, Lecture 3/5

Neil Chue Hong (University of Edinburgh), Open Source series: Making Software FAIR, Lecture 2/5

Carlo Piana, Open Source introduction and legal aspects for developers, Lecture 1/5

Isabella Masina, Giuseppe Lo Presti, The Physics of Music from Pythagoras to Microtones, Lecture 3/3

Isabella Masina, Giuseppe Lo Presti, The Physics of Music from Pythagoras to Microtones, Lecture 2/3

Isabella Masina, Giuseppe Lo Presti, The Physics of Music from Pythagoras to Microtones, Lecture 1/3

Echos in the Dark: Gravitational waves from colliding ECOs at Atom Interferometers

Patrick Hochstenbach, Exploring Scholarly Communication Using The Decentralized Web, Lecture 1/1

Ruben Dedecker, Control your data on the Web: An introduction to Solid and Linked Data Lecture 1/1

Direct detection of light dark matter with superconducting thermometers

Stefano Rossetti, Online tracking - problems and legal remedies, Lecture 1/2

Stefano Rossetti, Online tracking and Freedom of Scientific Research, Lecture 2/2

Michael Veale, The Past, Present and Future of Online Tracking, Lecture 2/2

Michael Veale, Understanding Data and Power in the Digital Economy, Lecture 1/2

IBM Quantum Platforms: A Quantum Battery Perspective

Quantum simulation, control and calibration using Qibo

Ab-initio two-dimensional digital twin for quantum computer benchmarking

Stochastic quantum simulations for scattering experiments

On the construction of useful quantum kernels

Classical splitting of parametrized quantum circuits

Noisy gates approach for simulating quantum computers

Sian Harding, Prof Emer, Imperial College London, "The New Science of the Heart", Lecture 1/1

Andrzej Nowak, Battling robots for our data, privacy and humanity, Lecture 2/2

Andrzej Nowak, Battling robots for our data, privacy and humanity, Lecture 1/2

James Peebles (2019 Nobel Prize), The Practice and Sociology of Natural Science, Lecture 1/1

FPGA programming

Living Well Within Planetary Limits: is it possible? And what can physicists contribute?