Lecturers
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- Elena Aprile (Columbia University, USA) and Elisabetta Barberio (Melbourne University, Australia) – The search for dark matter
- Indranil Banik (ICG, Portsmouth University, UK) – The local supervoid solution to the Hubble tension
- Karl van Bibber (Berkeley University, USA) –Axion and axion-like particle dark matter
- Filipe Costa (Lisbon University, Portugal)– Astronomical reference systems in the framework of General Relativity
- Mariateresa Crosta (INAF, Turin, Italy)– Dark Matter as a possible effect of General Relativity
- Joshua A. Frieman (Chicago University, USA)– Dark Energy: Theory and Observations
- Brenda L. Frye (University of Arizona)– Measuring the Hubble–Lemaître Constant by Time Delay Cosmography
- Asta Heinesen (Bohr Institute, Denmark) –Backreaction from inhomogeneities
- Ruth E. Kastner (Maryland University, USA) –Transactional Entropic Gravity and MOND
- Pavel Kroupa (Bonn University, Germany) –Cosmological models based on MOND
- Andrea Lapi (SISSA, Italy) – Stochastic approach to dark energy
- Valerio Marra (UFES, Vitória,Brazil) –Tensions in cosmology
- Roberto Peron (INAF, Rome, Italy) –Precision tests of GR in the Solar System
- Joseph Silk (Oxford University, UK)– Gamma ray probes of dark matter in galaxies and primordial black holes as dark matter
- Constantinos Skordis (CEICO, Czech Republic) –General relativistic extensions of MOND
- Sandro Tacchella (Cambridge University, UK)– The newest from JWST: implications for cosmology and galaxy formation
- Tim Tait (UC Irvine, USA) –Building realistic models of dark matter
- Michael Turner (Chicago University, USA) – The big cosmological picture and the big open questions
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