Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: Jeans

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MaxPlanckResearch 4/2017: Molecules for Medicine

https://www.mpg.de/10952304/MPR_2017_4

Medical practitioners want safe diagnoses and drugs with as few side effects as possible. To this end, Max Planck researchers are seeking to identify substances in nature that could benefit humans. In addition, they are expanding proteins into sophisticated transporters in the field of nanomedicine. What is more, our scientists want to use positron emission tomography, widely used in cancer diagnostics, for other diseases as well, with the help of appropriate tracer substances.
Jean-Luc Lehners at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational

Language-related gene responsible for branching of neurons

https://www.mpg.de/4408222/foxp2

Which genetic mutations enabled the evolution of language? The foxp2 gene plays an important role in language development. Simon E. Fisher at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in Nijmegen, Netherlands, and Sonja C. Vernes at Oxford University have discovered that this gene plays an important role in the branching of neurons in the brain during embryonic development.
, Matthias Groszer, Dilair Baban, Natasha Sahgal, Jean-Baptiste

Einsteins glücklichster Gedanke: die bisher beste Bestätigung

https://www.mpg.de/14921807/allgemeine-relativitaetstheorie-pulsar

Ein internationales Forscherteam unter Beteiligung von Astronomen vom Bonner Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie hat mit extrem hoher Präzision vermessen, dass sich Neutronensterne und Weiße Zwerge in einem Schwerefeld mit gleicher Beschleunigung bewegen. Dies gelang ihnen, indem sie die Bewegung des Pulsars PSR J0337+1715, eines Neutronensterns in einem ungewöhnlichen Dreifachsternsystem mit zwei Weißen Zwergen als Begleiter äußerst präzise vermessen haben.
© Jean-Philippe Letourneur, CRDP Orléans Das Nançay-Radioteleskop

Confirming Einstein’s most fortunate thought

https://www.mpg.de/14923530/general-relativity-pulsar

An international research team including astronomers from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR) in Bonn determined with extremely high precision that gravity causes neutron stars and white dwarf stars to fall with equal accelerations. They did this by precisely tracking the motion of pulsar PSR J0337+1715, a neutron star that is a member of an unusual triple star system.
© Jean-Philippe Letourneur, CRDP Orléans Nançay

Confirming Einstein’s most fortunate thought

https://www.mpg.de/14923530/general-relativity-pulsar?c=11970651

An international research team including astronomers from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR) in Bonn determined with extremely high precision that gravity causes neutron stars and white dwarf stars to fall with equal accelerations. They did this by precisely tracking the motion of pulsar PSR J0337+1715, a neutron star that is a member of an unusual triple star system.
© Jean-Philippe Letourneur, CRDP Orléans Nançay