CHAIRS, DISCUSSANTS, LECTURERS:
DAY1: Damiano Sacco, Daniella Mapelli, Fabio Scardigli, Fabio Scardigli, Federico Faggin, Gabriele Gionti, Gabriele Veneziano, Gerard 't Hooft, Giuseppe Vitiello, Ines Testoni, Massimo Cacciari, Piero Benvenuti, Piero Martin, Roger Penrose
DAY2: Alberto Peratoner, Diego De Leo, Dora Capozza, Egidio Robusto, Fabio Farinati, Fabio Scardigli, Federico Faggin, Gabriele Gionti, Giulio Goggi, Guidalberto Bormolini, Ines Testoni, Luca Palmieri, Luigi Grassi, Mario Plebani, Mauro DʼAriano, Paolo Navalesi, Raffaele Mauro, Santo Di Nuovo
DAY 3: Andrea Toniolo, Giulio Goggi, Giuseppe Barzaghi, Ilaria Malaguti, Kurt Appel, Leonardo Messinese, Leopoldo Sandonà, Roberto Tommasi, Santo Di Nuovo

** all conference works will be available in double audio (Italian-English) with simultaneous translation
** attendance at the 3-day conference will give access to the certificate of participation

Nobel Lectures

On May 19th and 20th two Nobel Prize winners are giving lectures after the conference. 

Il 19 e 20 Maggio due premi Nobel terranno due lezioni dopo il convegno:

Thursday 19th: 18.30 Nobel lecture – Gerard ‘t Hooft “A Confrontation with Infinity” (Un confronto con l’infinito) 

Friday 20th: 18.00 Nobel lecture – Roger Penrose “Physics of consciousness” (Fisica della coscienza)


Gerard ‘t Hooft  

has contributed to the major developments in fundamental theoretical physics of the last fifty years. Already in his PhD thesis, he renormalized the Yang-Mills theories, opening the way to electroweak theory, to quantum chromodynamics (theory of quarks), and finally to the Standard Model of elementary particles. He then turned his attention to Gravity, formulating in 1993 the Holographic Principle, which has been from then an illuminating guide for researchers in String Theory and Quantum Gravity. And, not least, in the last twenty years he developed his controversial deterministic interpretation of quantum mechanics, following the footsteps of Einstein. For these achievements he received many prizes, among which the Wolf Prize in 1981 and the Nobel Prize in Physics 1999.


Roger Penrose 

revolutionized General Relativity in 1965, introducing new powerful topological techniques to study the singularity problem. With his younger colleague Stephen Hawking, he developed the famous singularity theorems: if General Relativity is true, there must be a space-time singularity in the past (the Big Bang), and there must be singularities in the future (black holes). Then, Penrose also made fundamental contributions to quantum theory, proposing that the (spontaneous) collapse of the wave function is due to gravitational interaction. Experiments are designed in these years to verify this hypothesis. In the early 1990s, he tackled the problem of consciousness, finding evidence for the non-algorithmic nature of the mind and therefore its non-reproducibility on a machine. Among the many prizes, he received the Wolf Prize in 1988, the Dirac Medal, and the Nobel Prize for Physics 2020.