Max Planck Science Tunnel – 2000 to 2017 – a Success Story https://www.mpg.de/6412686/science-tunnel
Max Planck Science Tunnel – 2000 to 2017 – a Success Story
Story The Science Tunnel was an internationally unique science and brand exhibition
Max Planck Science Tunnel – 2000 to 2017 – a Success Story
Story The Science Tunnel was an internationally unique science and brand exhibition
Der „Science Tunnel“ gastiert zum Abschluss der erfolgreichen Mexiko-Tour im neuerbauten
in León eröffnet Science Tunnel in León eröffnet Der „Science Tunnel“ gastiert
Der „Science Tunnel“ der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, der am 8.
in Buenos Aires Science Tunnel in Buenos Aires Der „Science Tunnel“ der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
Science Tunnel 3.0 exhibition opens in São Paulo
A window to the future of research A window to the future of research Science Tunnel
A multiferroic tunnel junction provides storage media with increased data density
Each tunnel contact can be controlled specifically via the cobalt-electrodes.
Max Planck Science Tunnel wirbt im Weltmeisterschaftsstadion in Cali/Kolumbien für
News Aktuelles Max-Planck-Ausstellung im Fußballstadion Max Planck Science Tunnel
The tunnelling effect of electron, for example, takes time, as demonstrated at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics.
Homepage Newsroom Research News Measuring time in a quantum tunnel
The tunnelling effect of electron, for example, takes time, as demonstrated at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics.
Homepage Newsroom Research News Measuring time in a quantum tunnel
Future Dialogue zur Innovation in Russland / Science Tunnel eröffnet
Fortschritt durch Forschung Future Dialogue zur Innovation in Russland / Science Tunnel
Electrons behave like football teams: the match becomes interesting when the teamwork is as good as that conjured up by the players of FC Barcelona. Electrons which interact strongly with each other give rise to superconductivity, the lossless transport of current, for example. A team headed by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids in Dresden is now taking a completely new look at the teamwork between electrons. They have used a scanning tunnelling microscope to investigate the Kondo effect in the metal ytterbium rhodium silicide YbRh2Si2, which contains unpaired electrons and thus magnetic moments. At low temperatures, the strong interactions between the electrons completely shield the magnetic moments from each other. The Dresden-based physicists have now observed how this shielding is created. Their work also shows how well electronic processes in solids can be investigated with scanning tunnelling microscopes.
Deutsch Max-Planck-Gesellschaft Homepage Newsroom Research News Tunnel