We have restored access to the website from outside the CERN network, however access from certain worldwide locations is still being blocked (read more here).

CERN Accelerating science

Talk
Title The future of physics
Video
Loading
If you experience any problem watching the video, click the download button below
Download Embed
Part 1
Part 2
Talk 26 Jan 2005
Mp4:High
(600 kbps)
Windows Media:Medium
(480 kbps)
High
(753 kbps)
More..
Flash:High
(753 kbps)
High-resolution:
Copy-paste this code into your page:
Author(s) Gross, David J (speaker) (Nobel Prize of Physics 2004, Professor of Theoretical Physics, Director of the Kavli Institute For Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara) ; Treille, D (organiser)
Corporate author(s) CERN. Geneva
Imprint 26 Jan 2005. - Streaming video, 01:20:16:00.
Series (CERN Colloquium)
Note CERN, Geneva, 26 Jan 2005
The video was digitized from its original recording as part of the CERN Digital Memory project
Lecture note Talk on 26 Jan 2005 at 16:30 in CERN Main Auditorium
Presented at CERN Colloquia, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 1 Jan 2000 - 31 Dec 2009
Subject category Other Fields of Physics
Keywords nobel laureats ; theoretical physics
Abstract In this talk I discuss 25 questions that might guide physics, in the broadest sense, over the next 25 years.L'exposé de David Gross présente 25 questions qui pourraient guider la physique au cours des 25 prochaines années.
Copyright/License © 2005-2024 CERN

 


 Record created 2006-08-01, last modified 2022-11-02