François Hollande went to the Paris-Saclay campus on January 15, 2020 for a conference organized by the students of the Symposium association.
Proposed theme: "Responding to the democratic crisis" which is the title of his latest book.
François Hollande went to the Paris-Saclay campus on January 15, 2020 for a conference organized by the students of the Symposium association.
Proposed theme: "Responding to the democratic crisis" which is the title of his latest book.
This unique ‘intrapreneurship’, innovation, and leadership program for women executives will combine the expertise, and complementary cultures, of two globally renowned institutions, the European Engineering School CentraleSupélec and the US UC Berkeley Haas School of Business, as well as, the experience of the Women Initiative Foundation, a French Foundation with international reach promoting women in business.
The international program will equip women executives interested in excelling at managing complex projects with practical methods and useful tools relevant for any industry or corporate function. Effective strategies will be emphasized.
This program is about:
The T.I.M.E European Summer School is dedicated this year to Sustainability and the Global Economy. The objective of this two week summer programme is to give the students a deeper knowledge of the relation between sustainable development and the economic/financial conditions on a global scale encouraging them to propose creative solutions for real problems in a global context.
Organisation:
Project-based learning
International team working during the rest of the day. Projects are:
Applications
Registration
CentraleSupélec with INRIA ( French National Institute for computer science and applied mathematics), Conseil régional de Bretagne (Brittany region), DGA-MI (French national defense) launched in March 2017 a chair dedicated to cybersecurity.
Professor Fabrizio Biondi is the chairholder. Here's the inaugural lecture which was held on our Rennes campus.
We have the privilege to receive Claude Cohen-Tannoudji for a lecture dedicated to laser cooling ( techniques in which atomic and molecular samples are cooled down to near absolute zero through the interaction with one or more laser fields ) and doppler cooling (use of magnetic trapping force to give a magneto-optical trap).
This lecture is given to first year students following Quantum and Statistical Physics courses.
The lecture will take place in Amphi 2 at 11.30 am on March, 20 th. It will be brodcasted on the Web through this URL: https://webtv.ecp.fr/lives/live-easycast-s23/
Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (born 1 April 1933) is a French physicist. He shared the 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics with Steven Chu and William Daniel Phillips for research in methods of laser cooling and trapping atoms. He is still an active researcher, working at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris.