English Master's Programs Academic Year 2021 / 2022
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Baden-Württemberg Exchange Program
Baden-Württemberg Exchange Program Baden-Württemberg Exchange Program offers doctoral students the opportunity to spend up to one year at one of the top institutions of higher education in southern Germany. The participating institutions include: • University of Freiburg (http://www.uni-freiburg.de/) • University of Heidelberg (https://www.uni-heidelberg.de/index_e.html) • University of Hohenheim (https://www.uni-hohenheim.de/en) • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (http://www.kit.edu/english/) • University of Konstanz (https://www.uni-konstanz.de/en/) • University of Mannheim (https://www.uni-mannheim.de/en/) • University of Stuttgart (https://www.uni-stuttgart.de/en/index.html) • University of Tübingen (https://uni-tuebingen.de/en/) • Ulm University (https://www.uni-ulm.de/en/) The exchange program offers many attractive features: • An opportunity to conduct research or study at no tuition cost to Yale doctoral students at the German institutions, as well as easily collaborate with German faculty and students • If interested, taking a German language course or a substantial language program (depending on the length of the exchange) to familiarize students with German culture and customs • A generous scholarship from the Baden-Württemberg Foundation (900 Euros/month) which makes the program affordable (additional funding may be available through MacMillan Center) • Flexible length of the exchange: semester, year or summer (students must apply for at least three months of exchange) • Dormitory housing (in single rooms) with German and -
Differentiation of Physical and Chemical Cross-Linking in Gelatin Methacryloyl Hydrogels Lisa Rebers 1,+ , Raffael Reichsöllner 2,+ , Sophia Regett 1, Günter E
Supplementary Information Differentiation of Physical and Chemical Cross-Linking in Gelatin Methacryloyl Hydrogels Lisa Rebers 1,+ , Raffael Reichsöllner 2,+ , Sophia Regett 1, Günter E. M. Tovar 1,3, *, Kirsten Borchers 1,3 , Stefan Baudis 2 and Alexander Southan 1, * 1 Institute of Interfacial Process Engineering and Plasma Technology, University of Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany. 2 Christian Doppler Laboratory for Advanced Polymers for Biomaterials and 3D Printing, Institute of Applied Synthetic Chemistry, TU Wien, Vienna, Austria. 3 Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology, Stuttgart, Germany. * [email protected], [email protected] + These authors contributed equally. Figure S1: 1H-NMR spectra of gelatin used for methacryloylation (GM) (and acetylation (GMA)) and its derivatives. Unmodified lysine groups, only present in the spectrum of the unmodified gelatin, were highlighted in dark grey, acrylic protons of methacryloyl groups in light grey. The figure was created with Origin 2019b (https://www.originlab.com/2019b). Figure S2: Utilized temperature profile for physical gelation prior to chemical cross-linking. The 37 °C warm GM-solutions were cooled for 20 min to 21 °C followed by cooling to 4 °C 40 min (green dotted lines). Afterwards, infrared spectroscopy (IR) acquisition was started (orange dotted line) and the UV light was turned on 5 s later (blue dotted line). The figure was created with Origin 2019b (https://www.originlab.com/2019b). Figure S3: Circular dichroism (CD) spectra of gelatin ( A), GM2 ( B), GM2A8 ( C) and GM10 ( D). CD spectra were recorded at 37 °C or after cooling procedure (37 °C to 21 °C for 20 min followed by cooling to 4 °C for 40 min). -
Probabilistic Engineering Mechanics
PROBABILISTIC ENGINEERING MECHANICS AUTHOR INFORMATION PACK TABLE OF CONTENTS XXX . • Description p.1 • Audience p.2 • Impact Factor p.2 • Abstracting and Indexing p.2 • Editorial Board p.2 • Guide for Authors p.4 ISSN: 0266-8920 DESCRIPTION . This journal provides a forum for scholarly work dealing primarily with probabilistic and statistical approaches to contemporary solid/structural and fluid mechanics problems encountered in diverse technical disciplines such as aerospace, civil, marine, mechanical, and nuclear engineering. The journal aims to maintain a healthy balance between general solution techniques and problem- specific results, encouraging a fruitful exchange of ideas among disparate engineering specialities. From time to time, review papers will be published to provide research and development oriented readers with state-of-the-art analyses of various areas of current interest. In addition, occasional papers of tutorial nature help enhance practice oriented readers' knowledge of the basic probabilistic and statistical techniques that are essential in present-day engineering practice design. In consultation with the editors, distinguished members of the probabilistic mechanics community may serve as guest editors for a special issue dedicated to a particular theme. Fields Covered: Aerospace engineering: • Damage-tolerant and durability design of aircraft • Load spectra characterisation • Random vibration of aerospace structures Civil engineering: • Geotechnical applications • Natural hazards such as earthquakes, hurricanes, -
The Stuttgart Region – Where Growth Meets Innovation Design: Atelier Brückner/Ph Oto: M
The Stuttgart Region – Where Growth Meets Innovation oto: M. Jungblut Design: Atelier Brückner/Ph CERN, Universe of Particles/ Mercedes-Benz B-Class F-Cell, Daimler AG Mercedes-Benz The Stuttgart Region at a Glance Situated in the federal state of Baden- The Stuttgart Region is the birthplace and Württemberg in the southwest of Germa- home of Gottlieb Daimler and Robert ny, the Stuttgart Region comprises the Bosch, two important figures in the history City of Stuttgart (the state capital) and its of the motor car. Even today, vehicle five surrounding counties. With a popula- design and production as well as engineer- tion of 2.7 million, the area boasts a highly ing in general are a vital part of the region’s advanced industrial infrastructure and economy. Besides its traditional strengths, enjoys a well-earned reputation for its eco- the Stuttgart Region is also well known nomic strength, cutting-edge technology for its strong creative industries and its and exceptionally high quality of life. The enthusiasm for research and development. region has its own parliamentary assembly, ensuring fast and effective decision-mak- All these factors make the Stuttgart ing on regional issues such as local public Region one of the most dynamic and effi- transport, regional planning and business cient regions in the world – innovative in development. approach, international in outlook. Stuttgart Region Key Economic Data Population: 2.7 million from 170 countries Area: 3,654 km2 Population density: 724 per km2 People in employment: 1.5 million Stuttgart Region GDP: 109.8 billion e Corporate R&D expenditure as % of GDP: 7.5 Export rate of manufacturing industry: 63.4 % Productivity: 72,991 e/employee Per capita income: 37,936 e Data based on reports by Wirtschaftsförderung Region Stuttgart GmbH, Verband Region Stuttgart, IHK Region Stuttgart and Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg, 2014 Stuttgart-Marketing GmbH Oliver Schuster A Great Place to Live and Work Top Quality of Life Germany‘s Culture Capitals 1. -
Studying in the Land of the Future!
Baden-Württemberg DAS LAND DER ZUKUNFT! Entdecken Sie die attraktiven Deutschland Studien- und Forschungsbedingungen unseres Landes! Baden- Württemberg We’re here to help. Welcome to Baden-Württemberg Do you have questions about studying or conducting research in Baden-Württemberg? Perhaps you are thinking about pursuing your academic career in Baden-Württemberg, you are looking for partners for knowledge-sharing or joint research projects, or you would like to visit us to gain some first-hand impressions? Then Baden-Württemberg International is here STUDYING IN to help: [email protected] Baden-Württemberg International (bw-i) is the centre of compe- tence of the German state of Baden-Württemberg for the inter- THE LAND nationalisation of business and science. We lend support to domestic and foreign companies, clusters and networks, research institu- tions and universities as well as to regions and municipalties by serving as the central first point-of-contact in all questions relat- ing to internationalisation. OF THE FUTURE! Find out more ! Visit www.bw-studyguide.de and www.bw-career.de/en/home find out more about studying and conducting research in Baden-Württemberg. Follow us and on Facebook: Instagram: bw-studyguide study_in_bw Baden-Württemberg DAS LAND DER ZUKUNFT! Entdecken Sie die attraktiven Deutschland Studien- und Forschungsbedingungen unseres Landes! Baden- Württemberg WELCOME TO BADEN-WÜRTTEMBERG Contents 4 – 17 18 – 23 24 – 27 THE STATE OF BADEN- RESEARCH UNIVERSITIES OF We’re here to help. Welcome to Baden-Württemberg WÜRTTEMBERG UNIVERSITIES APPLIED SCIENCES Do you have questions about studying or conducting research in Baden-Württemberg? Perhaps you are thinking about Discover everything that Study with the best at Applied study at the pursuing your academic career in Baden-Württemberg, you are Baden-Württemberg the state’s nine research 23 state-run universities looking for partners for knowledge-sharing or joint research has to offer: its economy, universities. -
Validation of a Prospective Urinalysis-Based Prediction Model for ICU Resources and Outcome of COVID-19 Disease: a Multicenter Cohort Study
Journal of Clinical Medicine Article Validation of a Prospective Urinalysis-Based Prediction Model for ICU Resources and Outcome of COVID-19 Disease: A Multicenter Cohort Study Oliver Gross 1,* , Onnen Moerer 2,† , Thomas Rauen 3,†, Jan Böckhaus 1,†, Elion Hoxha 4,†, Achim Jörres 5, Matthias Kamm 5, Amin Elfanish 5, Wolfram Windisch 6, Michael Dreher 7,‡, Juergen Floege 3, Stefan Kluge 8, Christian Schmidt-Lauber 4, Jan-Eric Turner 4, Samuel Huber 9 , Marylyn M. Addo 9 , Simone Scheithauer 10, Tim Friede 11,§ , Gerald S. Braun 3,§, Tobias B. Huber 4,§ and Sabine Blaschke 12,§ 1 Clinic for Nephrology and Rheumatology, University Medical Center Göttingen, 37075 Göttingen, Germany; [email protected] 2 Clinic of Anaesthesiology, University Medical Center Göttingen, 37075 Göttingen, Germany; [email protected] 3 Division of Nephrology and Clinical Immunology, RWTH Aachen University, 52074 Aachen, Germany; [email protected] (T.R.); jfl[email protected] (J.F.); [email protected] (G.S.B.) 4 III. Department of Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, 20246 Hamburg, Germany; [email protected] (E.H.); [email protected] (C.S.-L.); [email protected] (J.-E.T.); [email protected] (T.B.H.) 5 Department of Medicine I, Nephrology, Transplantation and Medical Intensive Care, Citation: Gross, O.; Moerer, O.; University Witten/Herdecke Medical Center Cologne-Merheim, 51109 Cologne, Germany; Rauen, T.; Böckhaus, J.; Hoxha, E.; [email protected] (A.J.); [email protected] (M.K.); [email protected] (A.E.) 6 Jörres, A.; Kamm, M.; Elfanish, A.; Department of Pneumology and Critical Care Medicine, University Witten/Herdecke, Medical Center Cologne-Merheim, 51109 Cologne, Germany; [email protected] Windisch, W.; Dreher, M.; et al. -
Dr. Martin Zimmermann Curriculum Vitae
Dr. Martin Zimmermann Curriculum Vitae Professional Mail: Contact Reactive Systems Group Universität des Saarlandes 66123 Saarbrücken Germany Office: Saarland Informatics Campus, Building E 1 1, Room 1.13 Phone: +49 681 302 5667 Email: [email protected] URL: www.react.uni-saarland.de/people/zimmermann.html Employment Saarland University May 2013 - present Postdoc University of Warsaw February 2012 - April 2013 Postdoc RWTH Aachen University February 2009 - January 2012 Research Assistant Education RWTH Aachen University February 2009 - January 2012 PhD Student Thesis: Solving Infinite Games with Bounds Adviser: Wolfgang Thomas RWTH Aachen University September 2003 - January 2009 Diploma in Computer Science Minor in Business Administration Thesis: Time-optimal Winning Strategies in Infinite Games Adviser: Wolfgang Thomas Awards and Springorum Medal 2010 Scholarships Awarded for diploma with distinction at RWTH Aachen University Fulbright Scholarship September 2007 - June 2008 DePaul University, Chicago, IL GPA (through one year): 4.0 Grants DFG Project “Tradeoffs in Controller Synthesis” January 2015 - September 2018 Principal Investigator Grant covers salary and travel for PI and one PhD student 1 Activities GandALF 2018 PC co-chair and organizing chair Highlights of Logic, Games, and Automata 2018 PC member TIME 2017 PC member Events Workshop “Algorithmic Verification of Real-time Systems” December 2016 Invited Speaker Workshop “Automata, Concurrency and Timed Systems” February 2015 Invited Speaker Dagstuhl Seminar “Non-Zero-Sum-Games -
Press Release TU9 Demands €500 Million for Digital Pact for Higher Education Teaching
Press Release TU9 demands €500 million for Digital Pact for Higher Education Teaching Berlin, July 16, 2020 The Presidents and Rectors of Germany’s leading Universities of Technology (TU9) call for a national dig- ital pact for higher education teaching. A first proposal put forward by the 16 State Ministers of Science called for €500 million in funding. The TU9 Alliance supports that call. The TU9 Universities want to use the experience gained in the summer semester 2020 shaped by the impact of the Corona pandemic as an opportunity to change teaching and learning. We need to consol- idate the positive experience gained with online teaching and find the right mix of online and on-campus teaching. Each format should develop its strengths. Used in combination, they will give us significantly more scope for interaction, projects and discourse. More than ever, as the place in which we learn, teach, research and organize, the university will become the central place for diverse and vibrant forms of encounter. In order to prevent every university from having to divert its scarce resources from other fields of devel- opment, we are calling for a national “Digital Pact for Higher Education Teaching”, as formulated by the 16 State Ministers of Science. The pact has yet to be put in place. That is a mistake and one that must be corrected. That correction should take in sustained investment in spatial and technical infrastructure. We need in- novative places of encounter to accommodate new teaching and learning formats, attractive further train- ing, codes of conduct for digital interaction with one another and a strong university didactics. -
Workshop: Possessive Relations: Interpretation, Syntax and Argument
Workshop: Possessive relations: interpretation, syntax and argument structure University of Stuttgart Call deadline: 16-August-2017 Possession is a semantic relation holding between two referents: the possessor and the pos- sessee. A marker/construction is said to express possession relation if it can minimally express ownership of some object by a person. However, morphosyntactic means used to code ownership such as English have usually express many more related meanings (possession sensu lato) such as part-whole, kinship, location, experiencer/beneficiary, attributive or social relations (inter alia, Belvin 1996). Alongside with this versatility in meaning there is also significant variation in the morphosyntactic means that code possession. E.g., languages vary as to whether they employ the intransitive presentational/existential strategy (BE type) with no dedicated lexical verb or the transitive strategy with a special possession verb (HAVE type) for the predicative possession (cf. Stassen 2013); there is even more variation with internal possession: genitive case/adpositions, possessive agreement indexes, zero, etc. (cf. Aikhenvald & Dixon 2013; Börjars et al. 2013; Jacob 2003). Finally, other constructions have been claimed to involve possession: different kinds of external-possessor constructions (EPC), e.g., the “possessor promotion to dative”, the locative EPC, restrictive-topic or applicative con- structions, etc. (cf. Payne & Barshi 1999; Lee-Schoenefeld 2006; Pylkkänen 2008). The workshop aims at bringing together linguists working on possession from different angles and with different theoretical persuasions. Topics on any aspect of possession such as the following ones are welcome: Interpretation: To what extent can the particular interpretation be derived from the meaning of the parts and how much is determined by pragmatic reasoning and context (e.g., Vikner & Jensen 2002; Seržant 2016)? Syntax: Are subtypes of possession associated with different structures or are they derived from one underlying locative structure (Boneh & Sichel 2010 vs. -
Baden-Württemberg Exchange Program
Baden-Württemberg Exchange Program Program Overview This program is a North Carolina Exchange program hosted by UNC Greensboro. In this unique program, North Carolina students have the chance to study at one of the Baden-Wuerttemberg Universities in Germany, and in exchange, Baden-Wuerttemberg students have the opportunity to study at one of the participating North Carolina public institutions. Program Facts Application & Eligibility Locations Program Dates *University of Mannheim (Mannheim) (Karlsruhe, Konstanz, Tübingen, and Hohenheim ) Heidelberg University (Heidelberg) Full Academic Year .................... Aug, Sept, or Oct to July *University of Hohenheim (Stuttgart) Spring .........................................Jan, Feb, or April to July *Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) (Karlsruhe) *University of Konstanz (Konstanz) Application Deadlines University of Stuttgart (Stuttgart) Fall/Academic Year ...................................... Mid-February *University of Tübingen (Tübingen) Spring ......................................................... Early October University of Ulm (Ulm) University of Freiburg *spring options Eligibility • (All but Mannheim) Minimum equivalency of two years of German Type of Program ............................................... Exchange • (Mannheim) Two years of German if taking German Program Dates classes • Must a degree-seeking student (Most Locations) • Have at least sophomore standing Full Academic Year ........................ October to September • Have at least a 2.75 cumulative GPA Spring -
Excellence in Engineering and Science Made in Germany TU9 Alliance
Excellence in Engineering and Science Made in Germany TU9 Alliance Technische Leibniz Universität University Berlin Hannover Technische Universität Braunschweig Technische RWTH Universität Aachen Dresden University Technische Universität Darmstadt Karlsruhe Institute of Technology Technical University University of Stuttgart of Munich TU9 Mission Statement TU9 — German Universities of Technology Excellence in Engineering and Science Made in Germany TU9 is the Alliance of leading Universities of Technology in Germany: RWTH Aachen University, Technische Universität Berlin, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Technische Universität Dresden, Leibniz University Hannover, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Technical University of Munich, and University of Stuttgart. Tradition, excellence, and innovation are the hallmarks of TU9 Universities. Founded during the Industrial Age, they contributed decisively to tech nological progress back then and continue to do so today. They enjoy an outstanding reputation around the world as renowned research and teaching institutions that promote the transfer of knowledge and tech nology between universities and practice. As such, they train exceptional young academics for careers in science, business, and administration and assume social responsibility. TU9 Universities foster top-class inter- national networks and diverse cooperation with industry, making them a key element of the German science and innovation landscape. The excellent research and teaching at TU9 Universities are based on independence, plurality, and freedom of expression. TU9 Universities have always been places of intellectual and cultural diversity where inter nationalization and integration are a matter of course. TU9 Universities embody ▪ tradition & innovation, ▪ excellence & interdisciplinarity, ▪ cooperation & competencies, and the world of tomorrow. TU9 Universities … excel in pioneering creative research in engineering and the natural sciences. -
Janet's Algorithm and Systems Theory
Janet’s Algorithm and Systems Theory Daniel Robertz Lehrstuhl B f¨ur Mathematik http://wwwb.math.rwth-aachen.de/~daniel 28.11.2012 Inria Saclay – ˆIle-de-France / L2S, Sup´elec, 28.11.2012 Outline Janet’s algorithm Module-theoretic approach to linear systems Parametrizing linear systems Inria Saclay – ˆIle-de-France / L2S, Sup´elec, 28.11.2012 Janet’s algorithm Inria Saclay – ˆIle-de-France / L2S, Sup´elec, 28.11.2012 Janet’s algorithm for linear PDEs ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x∂y ∂y find: u = u(x,y) analytic ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x2 ∂y 2 x2 xy y u(x,y)= a0,0 + a1,0 x + a0,1 y + a2,0 2! + a1,1 1!1! + a0,2 2! + ... Inria Saclay – ˆIle-de-France / L2S, Sup´elec, 28.11.2012 Janet’s algorithm for linear PDEs ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x∂y ∂y find: u = u(x,y) analytic ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x2 ∂y 2 x2 xy y u(x,y)= a0,0 + a1,0 x + a0,1 y + a2,0 2! + a1,1 1!1! + a0,2 2! + ... Inria Saclay – ˆIle-de-France / L2S, Sup´elec, 28.11.2012 Janet’s algorithm for linear PDEs ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x∂y ∂y find: u = u(x,y) analytic ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x2 ∂y ∂ ∂2u ∂u ∂ ∂2u ∂u ∂2u ∂u ∂x ∂x∂y − ∂y − ∂y ∂x2 − ∂y = ∂y2 − ∂y = 0 2 x2 xy y u(x,y)= a0,0 + a1,0 x + a0,1 y + a2,0 2! + a1,1 1!1! + a0,2 2! + ... Inria Saclay – ˆIle-de-France / L2S, Sup´elec, 28.11.2012 Janet’s algorithm for linear PDEs ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x∂y ∂y find: u = u(x,y) analytic ∂2u ∂u − = 0 ∂x2 ∂y ∂ ∂2u ∂u ∂ ∂2u ∂u ∂2u ∂u ∂x ∂x∂y − ∂y − ∂y ∂x2 − ∂y = ∂y2 − ∂y = 0 2 x2 xy y u(x,y)= a0,0 + a1,0 x + a0,1 y + a2,0 2! + a1,1 1!1! + a0,2 2! + ..