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To register for your free place at this talk, email astro-outreach@imperial.ac.uk or call 020 7594 7531 stating the number of required tickets. Refreshments will be served after the talk.

Nobody can hear you scream in space. So, isn’t space an unlikely place to look for music? But the concept of harmony transcends both music and the understanding of the world by contemporary science and astrophysics.

The quest for harmony allows us to address questions beyond pure science such as: What is the relation between cosmos, music and mathematics that was discovered in ancient Greece? Can we listen to stars, galaxies and the primordial universe? How does the representation of the universe influence musical creation? And many others.

These questions will offer a cosmic ballade that will take you from the Solar system, to pulsars, all the way to the cosmic microwave background.

This lecture will invite you to extend your sense of hearing well beyond what you are used to.

Biography

Jean-Philippe Uzan is a director of research at CNRS and works on cosmology and gravitation at the Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris. Alongside his academic work, he is the author of several dozen articles and books for the general public (some for children). He is interested in the connection between science, art and education.