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Topic: Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft


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In the News (Sat 2 Jun 12)

  
  Peter Armbruster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Armbruster (born July 25 1931 in Dachau, Bavaria) is a physicist at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) facility in Darmstadt, Germany, and is credited with discovering elements 108 Hassium, 109 Meitnerium, 110 (darmstadtium), 111 (roentgenium), and 112 (ununbium).
He was affiliated as professor to the University of Cologne (1968) and the Darmstadt University of Technology since 1984.
He has received many awards for his work, to mention a few: the Max-Born Medal awarded by the Institute of Physics London and the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft in 1988, and the Stern-Gerlach Medal awarded by the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft in 1997.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Peter_Armbruster   (283 words)

  
 Relativistic Astrophysics: a summer school at Bad Honnef
Therefore, the German Astronomical Society (Astronomische Gesellschaft) joined forces with the `Gravitation and Relativity Theory' section of the German Physical Society (DPG) in organizing this school on selected topics in relativistic astrophysics, such as gravitational lensing, gravitational waves, neutron stars and collapsing binaries, and accretion phenomena.
The organizers, Hanns Ruder, Harald Riffert, and Hans-Peter Nollert for the Astronomische Gesellschaft and Friedrich Hehl for the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft, wish to acknowledge the generous financial support from the WE-Heraeus Foundation which made this school possible.
We wish to point out that the names of the organizers of last year's school on ``Relativity and scientific computing'', Friedrich Hehl and Roland Puntigam for the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft and Hanns Ruder for the Astronomische Gesellschaft, were inadvertently left out of the report on this school in the last issue of Matters of Gravity.
www.phys.lsu.edu /mog/mog8/node12.html   (1704 words)

  
 Photoemission 100 years after Einstein
NJP is co-owned by the Institute of Physics and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (the German Physical Society).
It is co-owned by the Institute of Physics and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (the German Physical Society).
The Institute of Physics is a leading international professional body and learned society with over 37,000 members, which promotes the advancement and dissemination of a knowledge of and education in the science of physics, pure and applied.
www.eurekalert.org /pub_releases/2005-04/iop-p1y042805.php   (774 words)

  
 Annual Meeting of the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (DPG)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The German government, along with several foundations (notably the Heraeus foundation) is supporting the German Physical Society (DPG) in its International Year of Physics 2005 activities (which the Germans call the Einstein Year) to the tune of about $18 million Canadian dollars.
The German Chancellor (Prime Minister) was scheduled to address the grand opening of the DPG Congress for the International Year of Physics, but was replaced at the last minute by the Minister of Education, due to illness of the chancellor.
The congress had 7,500 physicists registered (Germanys population is 2.5-3 times that of Canada), with 100 high-school students invited from across Germany.
www.cap.ca /wyp/news/dpgMeeting.html   (443 words)

  
 Physik: DPG Tagungen - Sitzung SYLS 3
Mit Hilfe einer mathematischen Korrelationsanalyse erhält man unterschiedliche physikalische Parameter: Konzentrationen, Mobilitaetskoeffizienten, Umwandlungsraten.
Heinrich-Heine Universität Düsseldorf, IPkM, AG Physikalische Methoden für Biologie und Medizin, Universitätsstr.
Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, IPkM, Materialwissenschaften, AG Physikalische Methoden für Biologie und Medizin, Universitätsstr.
www.dpg-tagungen.de /archive/2004/syls_3.html   (8868 words)

  
 Physik: DPG Tagungen 2001 - Sitzung MO 4
Physik: DPG Tagungen 2001 - Sitzung MO 4
Laboratorium für Physikalische Chemie, ETH Zürich, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland
The contributions of two K-shells which could not be separated experimentally, will be presented separately in the RPA illustrating the shape and magnitude of the contribution of each shell.
www.dpg-tagungen.de /archive/2001/html/mo_4.html   (1711 words)

  
 Resources of Scholarly Societies - Physics
Deutsche Bunsen-Gesellschaft für Physikalische Chemie = German Bunsen Society for Physical Chemistry [In German and English.]
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Massenspektrometrie = German Society for Mass Spectrometry [In German]
Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft = German Physical Society [In German.]
www.lib.uwaterloo.ca /society/physics_soc.html   (1166 words)

  
 Physik: DPG - Pressinformation 028-99-10   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
New Journal of Physics is produced by the Institute of Physics (IOP), based in London, and the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (DPG), or Germany Physical Society, based in Bad Honnef, Germany.
Institute of Physics Publishing has been at the forefront of academic electronic publishing since launching its Web site and in 1999 was nominated for the prestigious Computerworld Smithsonian Award in recognition of its innovative application of information technology.
The DPG promotes understanding of physics, brings together its members and all other physicists, represents physicists as a body and promotes exchanges of information on all issues associated with physics.
www.dpg-physik.de /presse/pressemit/dpg-pm-28-1999.htm   (1127 words)

  
 Scientists levitate heaviest elements with help from cold oxygen
Using liquid oxygen to increase the buoyancy created by a specially designed superconducting magnet, they could now levitate a hypothetical object with a density 15 times larger than that of the densest known material, osmium.
This research is published today (11th May 2005) in the New Journal of Physics co-owned by the Institute of Physics and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (the German Physical Society).
Some materials, called diamagnetic, tend to become magnetized in a direction opposite to the magnetic field being applied to them.
www.eurekalert.org /pub_releases/2005-05/iop-slh051005.php   (446 words)

  
 IJC SPARC Press Release   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Both are learned, not-for-profit societies that operate as professional organizations serving physicists.
Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (DPG), or the German Physical Society, is the world's oldest physical society and with over 30,000 members the second biggest.
The Internet Journal of Chemistry was created with the idea that one of the greatest assets to chemists is the extensive and broad literature at their disposal.
www.ijc.com /trapdoors/sparc.html   (1070 words)

  
 PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway: Search/Browse Results   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The New Journal of Physics is an electronic, peer-reviewed journal (ISSN: 1367-2630), covering original research in all areas of physics.
The journal is produced by Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft and the Institute of Physics.
Copyright: Copyright © 1998-2005 Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft & Institute of Physics
www.psigate.ac.uk /roads/cgi-bin/psifullrecord.pl?handle=990023817-1648   (71 words)

  
 UCSF Library
Articles are published on the Web as soon as they are accepted rather than when an issue is completed
Issued by: Institute of Physics; and by: Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft
UCSF Library and Center for Knowledge Management
ucsfcat.ucsf.edu:2082 /record=b1312195   (70 words)

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