Image source Since Walter Kohn’s talk in this year’s meeting is about a topic completely unrelated to his Nobel Prize winning research, it is worth contemplating briefly on the great impact of his major contribution to chemistry and physics. Kohn was originally trained as a physicist under the tutelage of Julian Schwinger at Harvard University.…

Today I am very pleased to have the chance to moderate a press panel about Open Access at 4 p.m. Nobel Laureate Sir Harald Kroto will tell us about his efforts to improve science education with different online projects. Dr. Jason Wild, publisher of Nature Physics, will tell us, what Nature Publishing Group does for…

Waste is not usually a popular topic for polite conversation. Biochemists also avoided it for many years, thinking of protein degradation as a general process that simply gets rid of unwanted biological waste. It was not until Aaron Ciechanover, Avram Hershko and Irwin Rose discovered the ubiquitin-based protein degradation system that the specificity and centrality…

I like this type of blogposts. Three lines of text and lots of pictures. Below impressions from the Get Together on Monday night. The event was hosted by S.E. Chavan, the Indian Minister for Science and Technology.

There have been people who resented winning the Nobel Prize. And I don’t mean they actually looked down upon it with disrespect. I simply mean that they were terrified of the rock-star status and the public celebrity aura that accompanies the receipt of the prize. When the famously taciturn English physicist Paul Dirac won the…

Walter Kohn shared the 1998 Nobel prize for chemistry, but in his 86 years he has never taken a university course in the subject. That was not by choice, as Kohn described to me when I caught up with him earlier today: it was due to the Second World War. Although born an Austrian, Kohn…

Last night, I was lulled to sleep by the sound of 2007 chemistry laureate Gerhard Ertl’s gentle voice. Ertl wasn’t in my hotel room, I hasten to add. I had switched on my television and there he was on local network giving an interview… in German, naturally. I managed to identify a few words, such…

9.00 A.M. We bicycle down the scenic streets to the Bodensee where the sessions is going to be held in the Inselhalle. The meeting begins in front of a packed audience in the Inselhalle. The region is known for apples and these grace the tables outside. Students and scholars from all nationalities are seen, eager…

Ask an informed layman what he or she thinks is the greatest science-based industrial discovery or invention of all time and the person will likely name the computer, the transistor, the telephone, the incandescent light or perhaps even the blast furnace. But key as all these inventions were to humanity’s progress, there is perhaps one…

Every year Lindau is the meeting point of highly motivated and talented young researchers. An entire week they pause with their work in the lab. Instead they have discussions with other researchers and Nobel laureates on their agenda until friday. Nevertheless the Lindau comittee seems to fear that the participants, for whom solving problems is…