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The participants of the first French-German Wilhelm and Else Heraeus seminar in Roscoff, France
The participants of the first French-German Wilhelm and Else Heraeus seminar in Roscoff, France

First French-German Wilhelm and Else Heraeus seminar dealt with physics in living systems / Start of further binational seminars to strengthen the European idea.

Bad Honnef, Hanau, Germany, 25 September 2019 – Science is international and requires the free exchange of ideas and minds. However, in view of the increasingly widespread scepticism towards European integration, this matter of course is often forgotten. The committees of the Wilhelm and Else Heraeus Foundation therefore decided a year ago to set an example with a new series of events. “The aim of the new binational Wilhelm and Else Heraeus seminars is in particular to strengthen existing cooperation between scientists from Germany and a European partner country or to initiate new ones,” says Prof. Joachim Treusch, Chairman of the Board of the Foundation.

The binational seminars are conducted in cooperation with the German Physical Society (DPG), which maintains close relations with the Physical Societies of France, Great Britain and Poland and awards binational scientific prizes together with them.

The prizewinners will also be offered the opportunity to organise a binational seminar. The seminars will take place alternately at the Physics Centre Bad Honnef and in the partner country; they will be financed entirely by the Wilhelm und Else Heraeus Foundation. “We must ensure that European cooperation is deepened. Bilateral projects like these should act as driver for this,” emphasizes DPG President Dieter Meschede.

The new series of events kicked off in early September with a seminar entitled “Novel physics in living systems?” at the “Station Biologique de Roscoff” conference centre in Brittany, France. Organised by the winner of the German-French Gentner-Kastler Prize, Theo Geisel (Göttingen), together with his French colleague Hugues Chaté (Saclay), experienced and prospective scientists from France and Germany spent a week discussing, among other things, the challenges that biological systems pose to physics. This year will be followed by a Polish-German and a British-German seminar in Bad Honnef. Further seminars are in preparation for 2020.

 




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