Location:
Cosener's House, Abingdon, Oxfordshire, UK
Dates: 1st and 2nd June 2022
Registration is now closed
If you have a query concerning your registration, please contact Prof. Adroja
Practical information:
The meeting will start at 10:30 on Wednesday 1st June and will end at 16:00 on Thursday 2nd June. Please note that the second day of the meeting overlaps with a public holiday in the UK - this was unavoidable due to clashes with other conferences this summer (both those carried over from 2021 due to the pandemic, and those scheduled for 2022 anyway), with the venue, and with ISIS beam cycle dates.
Currently there are no incoming travel restrictions for the UK due to Coronavirus. We will update this page if the situation changes, but we advise you to check the government travel pages as well.
The meeting is free to attend and all are welcome.
We are keen to have posters from students and postdocs this year. We request that those who wish to present a poster indicate this on the registration form (above) and complete the text box on it for their abstract. If for whatever reason you have any problem with your registration, please contact
Prof. Adroja.
Meeting background:
Talks will cover current research in both theoretical and experimental magnetism, and is intended for anybody who wishes to become familiar with current research in this area, with the special emphasis to bring scientists from UK and abroad together to foster long-term collaborations. This year it will be the 20th TEMM!
Sponsors
The meeting is funded and organised by the following organisations:
Programme
The programme will appear here. Confirmed speakers so far are:
- Alberto Corticelli (Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems)
- Alex Gibbs (St Andrews University)
- Anuradha Vibhakar (Diamond Light Source)
- Attila Szabo (University of Oxford / ISIS)
- Bella Lake (Helmholz Zentrum Berlin)
- Elise Pachoud (Institut Neel, CNRS)
- Jorge Quintanilla (University of Kent)
- Lucile Mangin-Thro (Institut Laue-Langevin)
- Lucy Clark (University of Birmingham)
- Maria Daghofer (Universtiy of Stuttgart)
- Natalia Perkins (University of Minnesota)
- Paul Steffens (Institut Laue-Langevin)
- Qimiao Si (Rice University)
- Sian Dutton (University of Cambridge)
- Sid Parameswaran (University of Oxford)
- Silke Buehler-Paschen (TU Wien)
- Subhro Bhattacharjee (Tata Institute for Fundamental Research)
- Tom Northan de la Fuente (Institut Laue-Langevin)