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The iNANO center was established with the aim of fostering interdisciplinary research within the area of nanoscience and nanotechnology, i.e. promote synergistic interactions that cross traditional scientific boundaries. iNANO provides a framework in which leading-edge expertise in physics, chemistry, molecular biology, biology, engineering and ...
Science and Technology is a faculty at Aarhus University.Science and Technology offers sixteen BSc degree programmes, eight BEng degree programmes (Professional bachelor's degrees) and twenty-eight MSc degree programmes, nine of which are MEng degree programmes.
Liv Hornekær (born 1972 in Copenhagen. [1]) is a Danish experimental physicist who works in nanotechnology and astrochemical research.She is a professor at the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Aarhus University and head of the surface dynamics group at the department. [2]
It was established in 1956, on the birthday of Carl Holst-Knudsen, who was at that time the Chairman of the Board at Aarhus University. Originally worth 10 thousand Danish krones (DKK), it has grown to 100 thousand DKK in monetary value, and is awarded on 28 May annually. [ 2 ]
View of The Main Building overlooking the University Park. The building was finished in 1946 and holds the university assembly hall. Aarhus University was founded on 11 September 1928 as Universitetsundervisningen i Jylland ("University Studies in Jutland") with a budget of 33,000 DKK and an enrollment of 64 students, which rose to 78 during the first semester.
Centre for Storage Ring Facilities in Aarhus logo ASTRID2 is a synchrotron light source at the Department of Physics and Astronomy of Aarhus University . ASTRID2 was designed, constructed and is operated by the Centre for Storage Ring Facilities in Aarhus (ISA).
Jens Lindhard (26 February 1922 – 15 October 1997) was a Danish physicist and professor at Aarhus University working on condensed matter physics, statistical physics and special relativity. He was the president of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters between 1981 and 1988.
Michael Kneissl is a German physicist and professor at the Institute of Solid State Physics at Technische Universität Berlin. Kneissl received his doctoral degree in physics from the University of Erlangen–Nuremberg in 1996. [1] During his graduate studies, he was also a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1993.