Tough Times for Greek Science

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Tough Times for Greek Science interview Tough times for Greek science The recent economic crisis has drastically affected research and development in Greece, but competitive research goes on, says Eleftherios Economou, a founder of the Foundation of Research and Technology Hellas (FORTH) research centre in Greece, and former General Secretary for research and technology. ■■ Why did you decide to study physics? Studies is located in the town of Rethymnon During my undergraduate years at in Crete. However, the part of the Institute the Technical University of Athens I of Molecular Biology & Biotechnology that was very lucky to have had inspiring focuses on medical applications is located at mathematics professors. In particular, the campus of the University of Ioannina in one of them recommended some English northern Greece. textbooks on advanced electromagnetism FORTH is administratively independent and introductory books on quantum of the universities, but is able to offer joint mechanics. I was thrilled to discover faculty appointments and allows graduate intellectual treasures in them. Then, in the students to conduct their research in its early 1960s, the newly established research facilities. This type of cooperation, which by centre ‘Demokritos’ organized unofficial the way is available to all research centres in courses on modern physics, taught by Greece, has proved very beneficial to both researchers who had just returned after the University of Crete and FORTH. completing their PhD in the US or UK. FORTH has been quite successful Several colleagues of mine followed these in competing within the Framework courses and, as a result, they were set on a Programme of the European Union path to study physics abroad, in the USA, © E. N. ECONOMOU (EU). (In the latest report from the EU UK, France and so on. covering the period 2007–2010, FORTH ■■ What was the research landscape in was ranked number 1 among all Greek ■■ You started your career in the US in Greece and the US like back then? research centres and universities as far as the early 1970s. What made you decide In the 1960s, modern physics in Greece had competitive funding from the Framework to go overseas, and how did you select just been introduced with an emphasis on Programme was concerned, number 12 your topic of research? high-energy theory through the initiatives among all European research centres, The events I mentioned before oriented of Demokritos. But, in general, research and number 28 among all universities me towards studying theoretical physics opportunities in Greek universities and research centres in the EU.) Over the abroad, because the opportunities in and higher institutions were very few. 29 years of its operation up until 2012, 41% Greece were essentially non-existent. A In contrast, the University of Chicago, of its expenditure came from organizations few of my friends were already studying being one of the top US universities, outside of Greece, 18% from the private physics or chemistry at the University of offered excellent research opportunities in sector, 23% from structural, infrastructural Chicago. So, I included this university in my almost all branches of modern physics. In and matching funds, and 18% from the applications. The University of Chicago was particular, in the late 1960s, it was among state budget; the latter was supposed to flexible enough to accept me in the middle the centres worldwide where the novel cover salaries of tenure and tenure-track of the spring quarter of 1966, just after I topic of disordered systems was being personnel, and other inelastic expenses. had finished my military obligations in developed. During the 1970s, as a faculty In reality, all other sources of income the Greek Air Force. I had already decided member of the Physics Department at the contributed to these expenses. FORTH gives to study theoretical physics; the dilemma University of Virginia, my research interests about 250 fellowships per year to young for me at that time was choosing between were on disordered systems, amorphous researchers and among other activities has high-energy theory (very popular among semiconductors, the Hubbard model and created and operates the Crete University Greek students back then) and solid-state superconductivity. Press with more than 400 titles and about physics (almost unknown in Greece in the 100,000 book sales per year. 1960s). The attraction of the unknown and ■■ What are FORTH’s research activities? the then top-ranking solid-state theory Can you tell us more about this institution? ■■ What has the research environment in group at the University of Chicago led At present, FORTH consists of six institutes Greece been like more recently and how me to choose solid-state theory. My PhD that focus on applied mathematics, does it compare with that across Europe? thesis on surface plasmons in multilayered computer science, materials and lasers, Since the early 1980s, Greek research has metal/dielectric structures was completed molecular biology, chemical engineering improved mainly, in my opinion, because in 1968. Surface plasmons were thought at and Mediterranean studies. The first four researchers can compete for funds from the that time as alternative means to mediate institutes are located in Heraklion next to European Framework Programme. Very superconductivity. Of course, I could the University of Crete campus, the Institute competitive research groups, on a par with not guess then the future of this field — of Chemical Engineering Sciences is located those across Europe, now exist although nowadays known as the vibrant field in Patras next to the University of Patras they are the exception among the less of plasmonics. campus, and the Institute for Mediterranean competitive or inactive units. One of the 686 NATURE MATERIALS | VOL 12 | AUGUST 2013 | www.nature.com/naturematerials © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved interview problems of research in Greece is the rare were applied across the board without because, if it is implemented without a national evaluation of performance, and any consideration of performance. serious and comparative evaluation, it may mainly, its almost complete disconnection Recruitment for tenure-track positions reduce the quality of the existing centres of from national funding. A second is the is next to impossible and the brain drain excellence; such a development would be inadequate overall expenditure for research is steadily increasing. Nevertheless, there extremely difficult to reverse. Actually, the and development, which was (before the are some recent signs that things may be small number of ‘window dressing’ mergers crisis) only 0.57% of the gross domestic improving: a new law for the universities, implemented up to now have produced no product (of that, 0.28% was from the passed a year and a half ago, eliminated savings worth mentioning, have had no Government, 0.12% from the private sector, the politicized student bodies from the effects on scientific excellence, and have not 0.14% from sources outside of Greece university administrations and brought produced cooperation between universities; and 0.03% from various other sources). some new blood to their top level by instead, they gave rise to some temporal A third problem is the relatively minute introducing a kind of overseeing board upheaval, and added further uncertainty to contribution from the private sector, which consisting typically of senior professors. the competitive components of the Greek consists mainly of small enterprises that are National research grants and matching research system. unable to appreciably invest in research. It funds (financed by the structural funds) should be noted that in advanced countries have started reappearing. ■■ Are you optimistic about the future? the share of the private sector exceeds What do you see is the way forward? the sum of all other sources combined. ■■ Are any reforms currently being I think the foremost concern is how to Finally, the Greek government (and the implemented in Greece’s universities and keep the various competitive groups public) do not really believe that research higher institutions? within the universities and the research and technology is needed in Greece; I already mentioned the new law, which centres alive during the financial crisis. I thus whatever measures that are taken or is clearly beneficial, although some retain a glimmer of hope that this task can announced in support of research lack aspects of it require revision; moreover, be achieved provided that the structural consistency, and are usually limited to its implementation has not been without funds continue to supply money through rhetoric statements and window-dressing obstacles. The Greek government should competitive national grants, unnecessary actions. Therefore, in spite of the substantial immediately take some measures of no restrictions are removed, and no quick improvement achieved during the period cost that will reduce the bureaucracy and ‘fixes’ such as window-dressing mergers that 1980–2010, Greek research has not realized make the operation of the research centres have not been seriously evaluated will be its potential. more efficient. Any restrictions on salaries implemented. of research personnel paid from sources ■■ How much has the recent economic other than those of the Government must ■■ What are your personal plans for situation affected academic institutions be lifted. This would allow the best research the future? Do you intend to continue and research in
Recommended publications
  • Deliverable 5.4: SECOND ADVISORY REPORT of THE
    Deliverable 5.4: SECOND ADVISORY REPORT OF THE IAC Project no. 316165 Project acronym: CCQCN Project full title: Crete Center for Quantum Complexity and Nanotechnology REGPOT-2012-2013-1 SEVENTH FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME Deliverable 5.4 Second Advisory Report of the IAC Due date of deliverable: M30 Dissemination level: PU Second Advisory Report of the IAC Crete Center for Quantum Complexity and Nanotechnology Executive Summary Deliverable 5.4 comprises the Second Advisory Report of the International Advisory Committee (IAC) of the Crete Center for Quantum Complexity and Nanotechnology (CCQCN), an EC-supported FP7-REGPOT-2012-2013-1 project (project number: 316165), which is located at the Physics Department of the University of Crete and started its operation on September 1, 2013. The International Advisory Committee comprises three senior scientists (namely, Professors Zaanen, Buchner, and Saxena) and is a complementary body that assists the Management Committee of CCQCN in the research directions, hirings, twinning and workshops. More precisely, the scope of the IAC is to monitor the progress made during the implementation of the CCQCN project, and advice toward the most beneficial implementation of the project and on all aspects of the Center activities. The IAC assesses the evolution, achievements, success and/or possible problems of the project. The 2nd Advisory Report of the IAC takes into account the evolution, achievements, success and/or possible problems of CCQCN as revealed in the M13-M30 (M30=February 2016) period of the lifetime of the project. IAC members have visited the CCQCN on September 2013 (Prof. Zaanen and Prof. Saxena, attended the CCQCN Kick-off Meeting), September 2014 (Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • Metamaterials 2012 St
    17th-22nd September Metamaterials 2012 St. Petersburg, Russia th 6 International Congress on Advanced Electromagnetic Materials in Microwaves and Optics Programme http://congress2012.metamorphose-vi.org St.St. Petersburg,Petersburg, RussiaRussia Table of Contents Foreword.......................................................................................................................................................4 Preface.........................................................................................................................................................5 Welcome Message......................................................................................................................................6 Committee................................................................................................................................................7 Location.......................................................................................................................................................8 Conference Venue.......................................................................................................................................9 St. Petersburg Attractions........................................................................................................................10 Programme Monday, 17th September Optical and UV Metamaterials...............................................................................12 Microwave Metamaterials......................................................................................13
    [Show full text]
  • 6Th IC4N Book of Abstracts
    IC4N SPONSORS 2019 BOOK OF ABSTRACTS 6th International Conference from Nanoparticles & Nanomaterials to Nanodevices & Nanosystems Edited by: Efstathios I. Meletis CORFU, GREECE • JUNE 30 – JULY 3 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) It can be accessed in the University of Texas at Arlington’s institutional repository, ResearchCommons, at: http://hdl.handle.net/10106/28271 Publication Design and Formatting by Brittany Griffiths Cover Design by Brittany Griffiths Published and made openly accessible by: University of Texas at Arlington Libraries 702 Planetarium Pl. Arlington, TX 76019 Published in 2019 ISBN 978-0-9898878-6-1 Mavs Open Press 2019 University of Texas at Arlington BOOK OF ABSTRACTS 6th IC4N • 2019 Table of Contents xiii Foreword xv Conference Symposia Plenary Lecture xviii Radical Molecular Nanotechnology Sir Fraser Stoddart Keynote Lectures xx Artificial Magnetic Atoms Björgvin Hjörvarsson, Vassilios Kapaklis xxi Chemistry and Devices from Halide Perovskites Semiconductors Mercouri G. Kanatzidis Conference Abstracts 2 Impact of Nanoparticles on Amyloid Peptide and Protein Aggregation T. John, H.J. Risselada, B. Abel 3 Mechanistics of Spectrum Manipulation, Energy and Electron Transfer Reaction in Hybrid Materials Maria Abrahamsson, Elin Sundin, Deise Barbosa de Mattos, Mark Johnstone, Ambra Dreos, Henrik Sundén 4 From Carbon-Rich Molecules to Carbon-Rich Materials Igor Alabugin 5 Preparation and Characterization of Nanostructured AgNiO Thin Films A. Stamatelatos, N. Kanistras, D. I. Anyfantis, E. Violatzi, D. Geralis, S. Grammatikopoulos, M. Tsarmpopoulou, M.M. Sigalas, P. Poulopoulos 6 Responsive Self-Assembled Peptide Biomaterials and Applications Chrysanthi Pinelopi Apostolidou, Anna Mitraki i ii TABLE OF CONTENTS 7 Coexistence of Ferroelectricity and Two-Dimensional Electron Gas at an Oxide Interface A.
    [Show full text]
  • Final Accreditation Report Physics University of Crete Copy
    ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΗΜΟΚΡΑΤΙΑ HELLENIC REPUBLIC A ΔΙΠ HQA ΑΡΧΗ ΔΙΑΣΦΑΛΙΣΗΣ ΚΑΙ ΠΙΣΤΟΠΟΙΗΣΗΣ HELLENIC QUALITY ASSURANCE ΤΗΣ ΠΟΙΟΤΗΤΑΣ ΣΤΗΝ ΑΝΩΤΑΤΗ ΕΚΠΑΙΔΕΥΣΗ AND ACCREDITATION AGENCY Physics Institution: University of Crete Date: 13 October 2019 ΑΡΙΣΤΕΙΔΟΥ 1 & ΕΥΡΙΠΙΔΟΥ, 105 59 ΑΘΗΝΑ 1, ARISTIDOU ST., 105 59 ATHENS, GREECE Τηλ.: +30 210 9220944, FAX: +30 210 9220143 Tel.: +30 210 9220944, Fax: +30 210 9220143 Ηλ. Ταχ.: [email protected], Ιστότοπος: http://www.hqa.gr Email: [email protected], Website: www.hqa.gr Report of the Panel appointed by the HQA to undertake the review of the Undergraduate Study Programme of Physics of the University of Crete for the purposes of granting accreditation Accreditation Report_Physics_University of Crete 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Part A: Background and Context of the Review ................................................................................. 4 I. The Accreditation Panel .................................................................................................................. 4 II. Review Procedure and Documentation .......................................................................................... 5 III. Study Programme Profile ................................................................................................................ 8 Part B: Compliance with the Principles ............................................................................................. 9 Principle 1: Academic Unit Policy for Quality Assurance ........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Here One Can Enjoy Delicious Local and Greek Recipes
    Metamaterials 2016 Table of Contents Sponsors 3 Foreword 5 Preface 6 Welcome Message 7 Committees 8 Location 10 Conference Venue 12 Social Events 13 Session Matrix 14 Programme th Sunday, 18 September 18 Monday, 19th September 18 Plenary Session I 18 Oral Sessions Monday 19 – Morning 18 Oral Sessions Monday 19 – Afternoon 1 23 Poster Session I 27 Oral Sessions Monday 19 – Afternoon 2 35 Tuesday, 20th September 38 Plenary Session II 38 Oral Sessions Tuesday 20 – Morning 38 Oral Sessions Tuesday 20 – Afternoon 1 43 Oral Sessions Tuesday 20 – Afternoon 2 48 1 st Wednesday, 21 September 52 Plenary Session III 52 Oral Sessions Wednesday 21 – Morning 52 Oral Sessions Wednesday 21 – Afternoon 1 56 Poster Session II 60 10th Anniversary Special Session 68 Thursday, 22nd September 70 Oral Sessions Thursday 22 – Morning 1 70 Oral Sessions Thursday 22 – Morning 2 73 Oral Sessions Thursday 22 – Afternoon 1 76 Oral Sessions Thursday 22 – Afternoon 2 80 Notes 84 . 2 Metamaterials 2016 Support, Sponsors, Exhibitors Organizational support Crete Center for Quantum Complexity and Nanotechnology http:// qcn.physics.uoc.gr Diamond sponsors Metamaterial Technologies Inc. http://www.metamaterial.com/ Metamaterial Technologies Inc. (MTI) is a smart materials and photonics company that is changing the way we use, interact and benefit from light. The company specializes in metamaterial research, nanofabrication, and computational electromagnetic; bridging the gap between the theoretical and the possible. Through applied physics and intelligent design, it has developed a new platform technology using a variety of smart materials that are capable of dramatically changing how light can be altered and harnessed.
    [Show full text]
  • An Introduction to Quantum Physics
    An Introduction to Quantum Physics An Introduction to Quantum Physics A First Course for Physicists, Chemists, Materials Scientists, and Engineers Stefanos Trachanas Authors All books published by Wiley-VCH are carefully produced. Nevertheless, authors, Stefanos Trachanas editors, and publisher do not warrant the Foundation for Research & Technology– information contained in these books, Hellas (FORTH) including this book, to be free of errors. Crete University Press Readers are advised to keep in mind that 100 Nikolaou Plastira statements, data, illustrations, procedural Vassilika Vouton details or other items may inadvertently 70013 Heraklion be inaccurate. Greece Library of Congress Card No.: applied for and University of Crete British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Department of Physics Data P.O. Box 2208 A catalogue record for this book is 71003 Heraklion available from the British Library. Greece Bibliographic information published by Manolis Antonoyiannakis the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The American Physical Society The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Editorial Office lists this publication in the Deutsche 1ResearchRoad Nationalbibliografie; detailed Ridge, NY 11961 bibliographic data are available on the United States Internet at <http://dnb.d-nb.de>. and © 2018 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Boschstr. 12, 69469 Weinheim, Columbia University Germany Department of Applied Physics & Applied Mathematics All rights reserved (including those of 500 W. 120th Street translation into other languages). No part New York, NY 10027 of this book may be reproduced in any United States form – by photoprinting, microfilm, or any other means – nor transmitted or translated into a machine language Leonidas Tsetseris without written permission from the National Technical University of Athens publishers. Registered names, trademarks, Department of Physics etc.usedinthisbook,evenwhennot Zografou Campus specifically marked as such, are not to be 15780 Athens considered unprotected by law.
    [Show full text]
  • David R. Smith Shares Descartes Award for Material That Reverses Light’S Properties 2 December 2005
    David R. Smith Shares Descartes Award for Material that Reverses Light’s Properties 2 December 2005 David R. Smith, a physicist formerly at the The unusual property of left-handed metamaterials University of California, San Diego, has been is its ability to reverse many of the physical awarded the European Union’s Descartes Prize properties that govern the behavior of ordinary for Excellence in Scientific Research for materials. One such property is the Doppler effect, developing at UCSD a new class of composite which makes a train whistle sound higher in pitch materials with unusual physical properties that as it approaches and lower in pitch as it recedes. scientists theorized might be possible, but had According to Maxwell's equations, which describe never before been able to produce in nature. the relationship between magnetic and electric fields, microwave radiation or light would show the Smith, now an associate professor at Duke opposite effect in this new class of materials, University’s Pratt School of Engineering, shared shifting to lower frequencies as a source with four European researchers the €1.1 million approaches and to higher frequencies as it euro prize — equivalent to $1.29 million U.S. dollars recedes. — for their contributions to the development of a new class of materials known as “left-handed Similarly, Maxwell's equations further suggest that metamaterials.” lenses that would normally disperse electromagnetic radiation would instead focus it The five scientists, whose achievements created a within this composite material. This is because new sub-discipline of physics, will be presented Snell's law, which describes the angle of refraction with the Descartes Prize, named in honor of the caused by the change in velocity of light and other French mathematician, scientist and philosopher waves through lenses, water and other types of Rene? Descartes, at a ceremony held at the Royal ordinary material, is expected to be exactly Society in London on December 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Manolis Antonoyiannakis Editor, Physical Review LeErs Ling Miao (缪凌) Editor, Physical Review X
    Editors’ Session Manolis Antonoyiannakis Editor, Physical Review Le;ers Ling Miao (缪凌) Editor, Physical Review X Outline • Physical Review X • The editors’ point of view: • Editors’ role and challenges • What papers we are looking for • Some key quesHons in the field • Editorial standards: do they evolve? • Top-quality papers: fast-tracking, highlighHng • Unsuitable papers: editorial rejecHon • Impact stasHcs Why PR High Profile Gold Open Access Commercial Society NJP Nature Physics (good quality, well regarded) Nature Materials PRL P Nature Photonics R Nature AIP Advances Nanotechnology (For publicaon: only technical correctness) Physical Review X • all areas of physics • highly selective standards: eXceptional in originality, quality & substance, significance • eXpress editorial/review process • well-informed, responsible editorial judgment • no length limit • online only; integrated multimedia • eXpanded access h;p://prx.aps.org Highlighted in Physics Today Physical Review X Editorial Board Broad, International, Distinguished Marcela Carena, Theoretical particle physics Fermilab/University of Chicago To Learn More Visit PRX’s Website at http://prx.aps.org The editors and the Editorial Board invite you to submit your eXceptional work to PRX The APS Editorial Office • Editor in Chief : Research areas: Gene D. Sprouse Nuclear Physics Atomic Physics Stony Brook Univ. • In-house editors: 42 (predominantly for PRL, PRB) • Remote editors (mostly acHve researchers): 61 PRA, PRC, PRD, PRE, and RMP • Technical supporHng staff: 100 37,000 papers A
    [Show full text]
  • Organizing Institutions Metamaterials 2017 Table of Contents
    Organizing Institutions Metamaterials 2017 Table of Contents The Virtual Institute for Artificial Electromagnetic Materials and Metamaterials, in short the "METAMORPHOSE VI AISBL", is a non- Marseille, France, 28 August–2 September 2017 for-profit International Association, whose purposes are the research, the study and the promotion of artificial electromagnetic materials and http://congress2017.metamorphose-vi.org metamaterials. The Association has been established in 2007 by the partners of the FP-6 Network of Excellence "METAMaterials ORganized for radio, millimeter wave, and PHOtonic Superlattice Engineering" - METAMORPHOSE NoE - funded by the European Commission in 2004-2008. Sponsors 3 The METAMORPHOSE VI is an active network integrating, managing, and coordinating several researches and spreading activities in the field of Artificial Electromagnetic Materials Foreword 5 and Metamaterials. In order to achieve his purposes, the METAMORPHOSE VI AISBL pursues the following activities: Preface 6 • Integrate, manage, coordinate, and monitor research projects in the field of Artificial Electromagnetic Materials and Metamaterials; Welcome Message 7 • Spread excellence in this field, in particular, by organizing scientific conferences and creating specialized journals; Committees 8 • Create and manage research programmes in this field; Location 10 • Activate and manage training programmes (including PhD and training programmes for students and industrial partners); Conference Venue 1 1 • Provide information on Artificial Electromagnetic Materials and Metamaterials; • Transfer new technologies in this field to the Industry; Social Events 12 • Offer advice and services related to Artificial Electromagnetic Materials and Metamaterials to industries, producers, distributors, potential users, service suppliers and to the like in Session Matrix 13 Europe and worldwide. Among the other activities, the Association owns and organizes the Metamaterials Congress Series and the Doctoral Programmes on Metamaterials.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Chapters 1 & 2
    THE MEANING OF EDUCATION A lifetime of Summer Schools By Tassos Bountis 1 Prologue This is not only a book about my life. It is also the story of many others, colleagues, friends and students, who affected me deeply and who, I would like to believe, were also affected by me. Not only as a teacher and educator, but also as a co-traveler on a wonderful Odyssey, filled with unexpected, scary but also wonderful adventures, on the road to discover the meaning of education. Like Odysseus and his crew, we don’t know if we have already arrived there unknowingly, or if we will ever arrive at Ithaca. Perhaps, we have now reached the island of Phaeacians, invited by Nausika, to tell our story at the palace of Alkinoos. It has been so far a rather long and exciting tale of many stops at different Greek cities, where a great number of scientific discoveries of the past one hundred years were presented to Greek students, concerning the developments of a new discipline called Complexity, or Complex Systems Science. At the beginning of our journey in the 1980’s, it was all about Chaos, Fractals and more broadly Nonlinear Dynamics, whose influence in all scientific fields was expanding at an impressive rate. It was clearly a revolution, because it had already started in the 1960’s and 1970’s to change the way we thought about astronomy, classical mechanics, statistical physics, chemistry, biology, economics and engineering science. In the 1980’s, Chaos and Fractals were already shining beacons standing on a firm mathematical foundation rooted in a deep understanding of nonlinearity, dynamically as well as geometrically.
    [Show full text]
  • Semiconductor Physics Division Fachverband Halbleiterphysik (HL)
    Semiconductor Physics Division (HL) Overview Semiconductor Physics Division Fachverband Halbleiterphysik (HL) Werner Wegscheider Universit¨atRegensburg Postfach 93040 Regensburg, Germany [email protected] Overview of Invited Talks and Sessions (lecture rooms ER 270, ER 164, EW 201, EW 202 and EW 203; Poster D) Invited Talks HL 1.1 Mon 9:30–10:15 ER 270 Electrically driven single quantum dot emitter operating at room temperature — •Tilmar Kummell,¨ Robert Arians, Gerd Bacher, Arne Gust, Carsten Kruse, Detlef Hommel HL 2.1 Mon 10:15–11:00 ER 270 Theory of Ultrafast Dynamics of Electron-Phonon Interactions: Semiconductor Quantum Wells, Surfaces and Graphene — •Andreas Knorr, Stefan Butscher, Norbert Bucking,¨ Marten Richter, Frank Milde, Peter Kratzer, Matthias Scheffler, Carsten Weber HL 4.1 Mon 14:00–14:45 ER 270 Optical spectroscopy of wide-gap semiconductors: Is our picture of van Hove singularities still valid? — •Rudiger¨ Goldhahn HL 18.1 Tue 9:30–10:15 ER 270 Quantum Spin Hall Insulator State in HgTe Quantum Wells — •Hartmut Buhmann, Markus Konig,¨ Steffen Wiedmann, Christoph Brune,¨ Andreas Roth, Laurens W. Molenkamp, Xiao-Liang Qi, Shou-Cheng Zhang HL 20.1 Tue 14:15–15:00 ER 270 Y-branched nanojunctions as nanoelectronic logic elements, memory devices and sensors — •Lukas Worschech, David Hartmann, Chris- tian Muller,¨ Alfred Forchel HL 37.1 Thu 9:30–10:15 ER 270 Terahertz detection of many-body signatures in semiconductor het- erostructures — •Sangam Chatterjee, Torben Grunwald, David Kohler,¨ Tilmann G. Jung, Daniel Golde, Mackillo Kira, Stephan W. Koch HL 38.1 Thu 10:15–11:00 ER 270 Spin dynamics in high-mobility 2D electron systems: effects of electron-electron interaction and anisotropy — •Tobias Korn, Do- minik Stich, Natalie Steffek, Dieter Schuh, Werner Wegscheider, Ming-Wei Wu, Christian Schuller¨ HL 40.1 Thu 14:00–14:45 ER 270 Charge transport in organic molecular crystals — •Karsten Han- newald Internal Symposium: Nanostructured Photonic Materials Organisation: Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • Metamaterials 2012 St
    17th-22nd September Metamaterials 2012 St. Petersburg, Russia th 6 International Congress on Advanced Electromagnetic Materials in Microwaves and Optics Programme http://congress2012.metamorphose-vi.org St.St. Petersburg,Petersburg, RussiaRussia Table of Contents Foreword.......................................................................................................................................................4 Preface.........................................................................................................................................................5 Welcome Message......................................................................................................................................6 Committee................................................................................................................................................7 Location.......................................................................................................................................................8 Conference Venue.......................................................................................................................................9 St. Petersburg Attractions........................................................................................................................10 Programme Monday, 17th September Optical and UV Metamaterials...............................................................................12 Microwave Metamaterials......................................................................................13
    [Show full text]