
Particle Physics, Atomic-Nuclear, Gravitation, Cosmology

Particle Physics, Atomic-Nuclear, Gravitation, Cosmology

Particle Physics, Atomic-Nuclear, Gravitation, Cosmology

Particle Physics, Atomic-Nuclear, Gravitation, Cosmology
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Licia, Teresa and Iris
Licia Verde is a cosmologist and an ICREA professor at our Institute. She was awarded the Catalonian National Research Award of 2019, given by the Catalan Foundation for Innovation and Research, with the support of the Catalan Government.
Licia explains to her daughters, Teresa and Iris, what is her research about. She focuses on the large-scale structure of the Universe, and analyzes big galaxy surveys. Teresa is also interested in space, but she wants to become an oncologist in the future. Her sister Iris loves sports and animals, and she is thinking about studying veterinary or zoology.
Licia is an ICREA professor since 2007, and belongs to the Cosmology and Large Scale Structure research group at the Institute of Cosmos Sciences. Cosmology is the field of astrophysics that studies the origin, evolution and composition of the universe. Her group focuses on finding explanations for some of the still unanswered questions of cosmology, such as what dark energy is, or what originated the universe’s primordial perturbations. They also investigate if the current model of cosmology, known as the standard model, adjusts to the cosmological observations.
Visit Licia’s full profile or find more information about her research group.
Astrophysicists point to a crack in the standard model of Cosmology. The precision of new observational results on the early and late Universe have increased and researchers suggest the requirement of new physics to fit the new data. This is the main conclusion of a study published in Nature Astronomy and signed by researchers from the University of Barcelona, the University of California (United States) and the Johns Hopkins University (Maryland, United States).
Interview with the phisycist and cosmologist Licia Verde, who has been awarded the 2018 National Research Prize, for "having decisively contributed to understanding how matter and energy are d
On Wednesday, September 18th at 18:30 at the Institute for Catalan Studies, IEC, will be presented the exhibition "Dones i física", prepared by the Catalan Physics Society, SCF, a subsidiary of the Institute for Catalan Studies in collaboration with the Institute of Cosmos Sciences, ICCUB, and the Faculty
If we mapped the universe, where would the limits of what we know lie? How we know what we know about the invisible universe?