Physics PhD Research Day 2026 - UniTS
Physics PhD Research Day 2026
28th May 2026
Physics Department, University of Trieste, lecture room A
The Research Day, in its inaugural edition, is a workshop intended to showcase the state-of-the-art research carried out at the Department of Physics through presentations delivered by the second-year PhD students of the PhD Course in Physics.
In the coming years, the workshop will cyclically cover all the main research areas active within the Department, thus offering a broad overview of the scientific activities carried out by its research community.
The programme will also include a poster session by first-year PhD students, who will present their new research projects.
The entire physics community is warmly invited to attend. In particular, Master’s students in Physics are strongly encouraged to participate, as the workshop represents an excellent opportunity to learn about the research conducted at the Department and to become acquainted with its main scientific directions.
Please register via the following link by May 15th: https://forms.gle/PW2Lr7TEqoVBgJhf6
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WelcomeConveners: Angelo Bassi (University of Trieste and INFN), Giacomo Contin (University of Trieste and INFN), Giuseppe Della Ricca (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
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Morning 1Convener: Michela De Col
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1
Supermassive Black Holes: "camels" in the Sky
Supermassive black holes can power some of the brightest and most energetic sources in the Universe. In Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs), matter accreting onto the central black hole can launch relativistic jets whose emission is observed across the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from radio waves to gamma rays.
A useful way to visualize their broadband emission is through the characteristic two-hump shape of the spectral energy distribution, making some AGNs look like a "camel" in the sky.
In this talk, I will introduce how multiwavelength observations help us investigate the physical processes taking place in AGN jets, with a particular focus on the role of the Fermi-LAT space telescope in studying their gamma-ray emission.
Speaker: Ermes Aviano (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare) -
2
Bernardinis Lorenzo
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3
Gravitational Waves: Why They Matter and How We Study Weak Signals
Gravitational waves provide a unique way to study some of the most extreme phenomena in the Universe, offering access to astrophysical processes that may be hidden or only partially visible through traditional electromagnetic observations. Their observation has already transformed modern astrophysics, and future progress will depend not only on detector sensitivity, but also on our ability to extract information from weak, uncertain, or poorly modeled signals. In this presentation, I will first outline why gravitational-wave research is important today, from a physical, astrophysical, and methodological point of view. I will then present my recent PhD work, which focuses on the study of subthreshold gravitational-wave candidates and on the development of tools to account for detector response, sky localization, and statistical biases in population analyses. These activities include the use of statistical tests applied to sky distributions of candidate events and broader studies of network performance for present and future interferometers. I will also briefly discuss related work on PycWB, a modern and modular framework for unmodeled gravitational-wave searches.
Speaker: Davide Di Piero
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1
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Coffee break / Poster session
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Morning 2Convener: Samuele Cattaruzzi (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
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4
Fontana Luca
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5
Electron and Hole Dynamics in MoS2 probed by Time- and Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy
Transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) semiconductors exhibit strong light-matter interaction and tunable optical and electronic properties, whose control requires the understanding of the system response to an optical excitation. Here, we investigate electron and hole population and relaxation dynamics in bulk and monolayer MoS₂ using time- and angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (TR-ARPES). The measurements, performed at the SPRINT laboratory, provide energy, momentum, and time resolution suitable for probing ultrafast carrier dynamics following photoexcitation, in the whole Brillouin Zone.
Bulk and monolayer samples are excited with 1.94 eV and 1.85 eV pump pulses, respectively, and probed with a 26.4 eV pulse from High Harmonic Generation. The dynamics of hot electrons in the conduction band and holes in the valence band are analyzed and compared to identify signatures of many-body effects, including band-gap renormalization at short pump-probe delays. The evolution of the momentum distribution curves in conduction band is also examined. We observe an unexpected energy broadening and shift of the conduction band in monolayer MoS₂, which cannot be explained by direct optical transitions induced by the pump or by multiphoton absorption processes. Two possible mechanisms are considered: defect-assisted Auger-like processes and band-gap renormalization.Speaker: Sara Dottorini -
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Giraldin Carlo
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Gitton Maxime
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4
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12:35
Lunch break
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Afternoon 1Convener: Roberto Ingrao
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8
Using AI to Detect High-Redshift Gamma-ray Bursts Afterglows with Fermi-LAT
The detection of high-redshift (high-z) Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs) can significantly improve our understanding of the early Universe by providing tighter constraints on cosmological parameters and valuable insights into the formation of the first stars and galaxies. However, detecting them in gamma-rays is challenging due to the sensitivity of current telescopes in this energy range. This contribution will provide an overview of the theoretical and observational properties of GRBs, with particular focus on high-z events, and present a data-driven methodology based on Artificial Intelligence techniques developed within my PhD project to identify faint high-z GRB afterglow signals in Fermi-LAT data, with a focus on the 100 MeV–1 GeV energy range.
Speaker: Riccardo Martinelli (Units) -
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Mahmood Muhammad Saad
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10
Life in five dimensions
One of the many unexpected byproducts of String Theory is the discovery of interesting, interacting Quantum Field Theories in a five-dimensional spacetime. In this talk I will discuss differences and analogies with the four-dimensional world, focusing in particular on gauge theories. These theories admit a universal U(1) symmetry, that is the five-dimensional incarnation of the theta-term of four-dimensional gauge theories. I will present novel results on the action of such symmetry on extended operators, associated to magnetically charged excitations analogous to magnetic monopoles.
Speaker: Antonio Santaniello -
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Sbernadori Sara
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8
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Coffee break / Poster session
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Afternoon 2Convener: Giuseppe Troian
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12
Sgatti Lapo
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Cannito StefanoSpeaker: Stefano Cannito (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
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14
Interacting Topological Phases and Neural Network Quantum States
The Landau paradigm has been highly successful in understanding and classifying phases of matter through symmetry breaking and local order parameters. However, some quantum phases cannot be fully characterized within this framework, as their defining properties are topological rather than local. A paradigmatic example is the fractional quantum Hall effect, a strongly correlated phase where topology and interactions lead to exotic properties, such as quasiparticles carrying fractional charge and obeying neither bosonic nor fermionic statistics.
In this talk, I will use the fractional quantum Hall effect as an example to introduce topological phases. I will then present the Bose–Hofstadter model, a two-dimensional lattice system of interacting bosons exhibiting fractional quantum Hall physics. Finally, I will discuss how we can study such quantum many-body systems numerically, in particular how neural networks can be used as variational wave functions to approximate their ground states, with an emphasis on the Bose-Hofstadter case.
Speaker: Francesco Tognocchi -
15
Beyond Groups: Non-Invertible Symmetries and Fusion Categories
Symmetries play a fundamental role in modern physics, from condensed matter physics to quantum field theory. The traditional description in terms of groups, however, does not exhaust the richness of the symmetric structures that can be present in a physical system. In this talk we will explore these possibilities by introducing the concept of non-invertible symmetry, in which symmetry operators are described not by the elements of a group, but by objects of a "fusion category". Considering 2d systems, a graphical notation will be used to represent these operators as lines in spacetime, and we will discuss how these can fuse in different ways, giving rise to the structure of F-symbols. The latter constitute the fundamental data that completely characterise the category — and therefore the symmetry of the physical system.
Speaker: Massimo Zorzenon
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12
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Close-up
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