Confirmed invited speakers:

  • Dionysios Anninos (King’s College London,UK): "Black holes and gauge/gravity duality".
  • Beatrice Bonga (Radboud University,The Netherlands): "Non-linearities at black hole horizons".
  • Chris Belczynski (Copernicus Center,Poland): "Formation of BH-BH mergers as informed by LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA detections of high-frequency gravitational waves".
  • Jorge Casares (Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, Spain): “Observations of Galactic Black Holes” 
  • Mariafelicia De Laurentis (University of Naples Federico II,Italy): "Using SgrA* to test Theories of Gravity".
  • Daniela Doneva (Eberhard-Karls-Universitat Tuebingen,Germany): "Black hole quasi-normal mode ringdown". 
  • Heino Falcke (Radboud University,Netherlands): "Physics at the Event Horizon".
  • Dejan Gajic (Leipzig University,Germany) : "Black hole dynamics from a mathematical perspective".
  • Juan García Bellido (Instituto de Física Tórica,Spain): “Primordial black holes behind the origin of dark matter and dark energy".
  • Leonardo Gualtieri (Università di Pisa,Italy): "Black holes beyond general relativity".
  • Carlos Herdeiro (Universida de Aveiro,Portugal): "Bosonic stars and black holes". 
  • Michael Kramer (Max-Planck-Institut for Radioastronomy,Germany): "Recent results from Pulsar Timing Arrays".
  • Jerzy Lewandowski (University of Warsaw,Poland): "Intrinsic uniqueness of extreme Horizons”.
  • Patryk Mach (Jagellonian University, Krakow,Poland): "General-relativistic kinetic description of matter around black holes".
  • José Navarro-Salas (Universitat de Valencia,Spain) : "Black holes, quantum fields, and fundamental physics".
  • José M.M Senovilla (UPV-EHU,Spain): "Beyond black holes: ultra-massive spacetimes".
  • Viola Sordini (Université de Lyon,France): "Gravitational waves - a newborn astronomy".
  • Silke Weinfurtner (University of Nottingham,UK): "Black holes in the laboratory".