PLANCKS is an acronym for Physics League Across Numerous Countries for Kick-ass Students. PLANCKS is an annual international physics contest for bachelor- and master students. The event will be a three day event and includes a symposium, the contest itself, an excursion, an informal get together with drinks, a party and the award ceremony.
Symposium Program
To kick off the PLANCKS competition there will be a symposium on Friday May 22nd from 14:00 till 21:00 CET. The symposium will take place at the Gorlaeus Laboratoria (Einsteinweg 55, 2333CC Leiden) and will be open to the public. The tickets are available here.
13:00-14:00 Walk-in
 Scan your ticket and receive a bracelet. This bracelet indicates if you  are joining the buffet, the students barbecue or if you are only  attending the lectures.
14:00-14:15 Opening
 Please be in time!
14:15-15:00 Carlo Beenakker – Majorana particles
 Since the discovery of electron-positron annihilation we know that some  particles have an antiparticle and if the two meet they destroy each  other. Ettore Majorana suggested in the 1930’s that a particle might be  its own antiparticle, so pairs would have to remain widely separated to  survive. An example of such a Majorana particle was constructed recently  in Delft, using a superconducting “sea” of electrons to hide the charge  difference between particle and antiparticle. (One speaks of a  “quasiparticle” because it is not a fundamental particle.) The  application may be found in the area of quantum computers, using pairs  of Majorana particles to store quantum information in a way which is  protected from decoherence.
15:00-15:45 Leo Kouwenhoven – Are we ready to build a quantum computer?
 Richard Feynman speculated about it early 1980’s, Peter Shor came up  with an algorithm mid 1990’s and ever since physicists dream of making a  quantum computer. Progress was made on the building blocks, the qubits,  in the years of 2000-2010. Now it is the decade of quantum circuits  with a handful of qubits. The large companies like Google, Microsoft and  IBM start to make big investments. No big IT company wants to miss the  quantum revolution. But are we actually ready to build a quantum  computer?
15:45-16:30 Coffee break
 Grab some coffee or tea and talk about the previous or upcoming lectures.
16:30-17:30 John Ellis – TBA
17:30-18:30 John Pendry – Metamaterials & the Science of Invisibility
 Electromagnetism encompasses much of modern technology. Its influence  rests on our ability to deploy materials that can control the component  electric and magnetic fields. A new class of materials has created some  extraordinary possibilities such as a negative refractive index, and  lenses whose resolution is limited only by the precision with which we  can manufacture them. Cloaks have been designed and built that hide  objects within them, but remain completely invisible to external  observers. The new materials, named metamaterials, have properties  determined as much by their internal physical structure as by their  chemical composition and the radical new properties to which they give  access promise to transform our ability to control much of the  electromagnetic spectrum.
18:30-20:00 Dinner break
 For €15 extra you can join the buffet. The catering company Catootje will serve a delicious Mediterranean buffet.
 If you are a student you are also able to come to a barbecue instead.  For €7.50 you can join the barbecue organised by the study association  De Leidsche Flesch.
20:00-20:45 Erik Verlinde – A New Theory of Gravity
 At present we are witnessing a revolution in theoretical physics leading  to a completely new view on space-time and gravity. Studies in string  theory and black hole physics have revealed a deep connection between  the structure of space-time and gravity and key concepts of quantum  information theory. A central role in these developments is played by  quantum entanglement and its associated entanglement entropy. This new  theory on gravity and space-time has particularly important implications  for cosmology, where it leads to a natural explanation of the observed  phenomena associated to dark energy and dark matter.
20:45-21:00 Closing
For more information, check their website: http://leiden.plancks.info/