Tutorials

One of the goals of our collaboration is to provide a set of advanced tutorials on the subjects related to our collaboration.
These tutorials are given at the various events organized by the collaboration. They are recorded and collected on this page for public access.


Beg Rohu Summer School 2019

The Beg Rohu Summer School 2019 edition on “Glasses, Jamming, and Slow Dynamics” featured lectures by collaboration members Ludovic Berthier, Andrea Liu, Gilles Tarjus and Francesco Zamponi. All the lectures have been video recorded and are available on this YouTube playlist


Lectures on “Statistical physics of glassy systems: tools and applications”

Pierfrancesco Urbani gave a series of introductory lectures to the mean field theory of glasses, as part of the doctoral school activities in Paris.

Information and lecture notes can be found here:  https://courses.ipht.cnrs.fr/?q=en/node/194

The lectures can be watched on YouTube:

Lecture 1  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFWfLZ2IbHQ

Lecture 2  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XansiyUPE-g

Lecture 3  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUez6IrweJA

Lecture 4  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DaQbGE2kY-o

Lecture 5  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSlsMBsdkKo

Lecture 6  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBrXqbT56q8


Boulder Summer School 2017

The Boulder Summer School 2017 featured a series of lectures on universal features of disordered systems –such as rough free energy landscapes and rich sets of phase transitions– that can be understood and unified with ideas from physics.

All the lectures have been video recorded. The videos, together with lecture notes and reading material, are all available at this link:

http://boulderschool.yale.edu/2017/boulder-school-2017-lecture-notes


Tutorials Recorded During Collaboration Meetings

The Jamming Transition and the Marginally Jammed State


Elementary Excitations in Amorphous Materials (Slides)


The mean ­field theory of liquids and glasses


Real Space Behavior of Supercooled Liquids, Glasses and Jamming systems