Designed as an evening event, the 'Nuit des chercheurs' gives the general public the opportunity to come along and meet researchers. With a full programme for all tastes, everyone is invited to ask questions and interact. A number of researchers and PhD students from Centrale Nantes' research laboratories organised lectures and workshops. Read on to learn more about this year's different interventions on the theme of Vibrations.
In order to tackle climate change, technologies such as deep geothermal energy or underground storage of H2 and CO2 are showing great promise. However, they face a major obstacle: earthquakes, as interaction with the subsoil to inject fluids into it triggers seismic phenomena. How can this seismicity be avoided and energy production be guaranteed at the same time?
See the replay (in French)
Over the last few decades, our historical monuments have been subjected to explosive loading. Is it safe to make an explosion in a laboratory? Test yourself as a researcher to learn more about the properties of explosions and their propagation, through videos and original experiments. With the Research Institute in Civil and Mechanical Engineering (GeM) and Centrale Nantes // CNRS - Nantes Université
Earthquakes are destructive phenomena that have occurred throughout human history. The researchers present a system that explains the propagation of vibrations through a continuous medium. With your new knowledge, it is up to you to decide: can earthquakes be controlled? With the Research Institute in Civil and Mechanical Engineering (GeM) and Centrale Nantes // CNRS - Nantes Université
Alpha, Beta, Theta, Delta and Gamma… it's all Greek to you? Think again! These are the waves that make your brain vibrate, at any given moment. Through this activity, the participants put their grey matter to work to try to recognise the different cognitive states, without confusing dreams with reality. With the Laboratory of Digital Sciences of Nantes (LS2N) // CNRS - Nantes
Timbale, conga, darbouka, taiko... All musical cultures have their drums. To understand them in all their diversity, researchers at Nantes University are developing an interactive simulation environment. Enter a multisensory universe and explore with the researchers the interaction between human and machine. With the Laboratory of Digital Sciences of Nantes (LS2N) // CNRS - Nantes