- April 20, 2022. Douglas J. Jerolmack, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
How things fall apart: The shape of failure across the solar system. - September 5-6, 2022. Applied Mathematics Without Borders
On the occasion of 60th anniversary of Gábor Domokos. - April 20, 2022. Marjorie Senechal
Penrose tilings and the Imagination. - November 18, 2019. Bernd Krauskopf, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Excitability and feedback: to pulse or not to pulse? - October 22, 2019. Alain Goriely, University of Oxford
On the shape of gravitating planets - October 16, 2019. László Székelyhidi, Universität Leipzig, Germany
Rigid surfaces from Euclid to Nash and how to bend them. - October 16, 2019. Uriel Frisch, CNRS, France
Leonardo da Vinci, Tódor Kármán and many more: the decay of turbulence. - June 27, 2019. Boris Khesin, Department of Mathematics, University of Toronto, Toronto
- April 29, 2019. Denis Weaire FRS, Trinity College, Dublin
- April 13, 2019. Douglas J. Jerolmack, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Ferenc Kun, University of Debrecen, Debrecen
- December 12, 2018. Sir Michael Berry, University of Bristol
- May 16, 2018. Bernd Krauskopf, University of Auckland, New Zealand
- May 6, 2018. Snorre H. Christiansen, Oslo University, Norway
Finite element complexes for the Stokes equation - March 26, 2018. Duccio Bertoni, Università di Pisa, Italy
Shape evolution of marked pebbles on a coarse-clastic beach: implications for coastal morphodynamics - February 6, 2018. Daniel Barreto, Edinburgh Napier University, Scotland
Contact force entropy coordinates – Their relationship with critical states and shearing resistance - November 13, 2017. Rocky S. Taylor, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
Morphodynamics of sea ice: exploring morphological evolution of ice rubble and ridges during the seasonal life cycle of deformed first-year sea ice - October 2, 2017. László Székelyhidi, Universität Leipzig, Germany
Rigid surfaces and how Nash bent them