Archive 2016
Wednesday, 14 December, 2016
Prof. Daniel Müller joins CeNS Advisory Board
Prof. Daniel Müller, ETH Zürich, is a new member CeNS Advisory Board for the upcoming four years. He will complement the expertise of the current board members Prof. David Awschalom, Prof. Gerd Binnig, Prof. Cees Dekker, Prof. Andreas Engel and Prof. Klaus Müllen.
Prof. Müller studied physics at more …
Monday, 12 December, 2016
New Nano-Institute reaches first peak
The roofing ceremony for the new Nano-Institute which is under construction near Munich’s English Garden took place on Tuesday. In 2019, two of LMU’s Chairs in Experimental Physics will take up residence in the finished building.
The new building will provide laboratories, state-of-the-art clean more …
Saturday, 26 November, 2016
CeNS Publication Award Winners 2016!
Authors of outstanding publications receive Publication Awards more …
Friday, 25 November, 2016
Professor Tim Liedl is new spokesman of CeNS
At its annual assembly, the CeNS members re-elected Prof. Dieter Braun, Prof. Tim Liedl, Prof. Schollwöck (all Physics Department), Prof. Claudia Veigel (Medical Faculty) and Prof. Achim Hartschuh (Chemistry Department) as members of the CeNS board for 2017-2018.
In addition, Prof. Tim Liedl was more …
Monday, 21 November, 2016
Professor Gregor Cevc honored in Slovenia
Three ambassadors of science more …
Thursday, 17 November, 2016
Groundbreaking ceremony for new attocube systems headquarter
More space for CeNS spin-off more …
Thursday, 17 November, 2016
Professor Christian Ochsenfeld receives Bavarian University Teaching Award
Professor Christian Ochsenfeld, Department Chemie der LMU, Dr. Daniela Kugelmann von der Anatomischen Anstalt der Medizinischen Fakultät sowie PD Dr. Felix Schönbrodt von der Fakultät für Psychologie und Pädagogik werden in diesem Jahr mit dem Preis für gute Lehre an Bayerns Universitäten more …
Thursday, 10 November, 2016
CeNS company visit
CeNS PhD students visited NanoTemper Technologies more …
Thursday, 03 November, 2016
Shaping up to make the cut
Before RNA copies of genes can program the synthesis of proteins, the non-coding regions are removed by the spliceosome. Munich researchers report that distinct conformations of a member of this molecular complex play a vital role in the process.
Ribonucleic acids – RNAs for short – serve as more …