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The team from the Institute of Applied Physics at the University of Bonn
(from left) Niels Wolf, Prof. Dr. Martin Weitz, Andreas Redmann, Dr. Frank Vewinger and Dr. Julian Schmitt.
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Researchers create an “imprint” on a super photon
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The team who worked on the study in Bonn
Dr. Julian Schmitt, Dr. Frank Vewinger, Prof. Dr. Martin Weitz and Kirankumar Karkihalli Umesh.
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Researchers create a one-dimensional gas out of light
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The University of Bonn
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SS 24, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
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The University of Bonn (University Main Building shown here)
is participating in several Collaborative Research Centers for which the German Research Foundation has now confirmed continued funding.
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CRC/Transregio (TRR) 185 “OSCAR” has been extended for a third funding period
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The University of Bonn’s - exhibit aboard the “MS Wissenschaft.”
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University of Bonn Exhibit Aboard “MS Wissenschaft”
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The wavefunction matching
replaces the short-distance part of the two-body wavefunction for a realistic interaction that exhibits strong oscillations with that of a simple, easily ...
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International research team cracks a hard physics problem
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Theoretical Condensed Matter
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Theoretical Nuclear and Particle Physics
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This is how it looks in practice:
The different rotational directions of the various “dumbbells” indicate that the atoms lie in different planes.
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New method measures the 3D position of individual atoms
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This X-ray image shows the full extent of the Virgo Cluster, - which is the closest galaxy cluster (collection of galaxies) to us. The bright white spot at the center is the central galaxy M87 (known for the picture of the supermassive blackhole as observed by the Event Horizon Telescope). The hazy white glow around M87 is the very hot gas between galaxies. It extends out more in some directions than others, and isn’t circular; this is evidence that the Virgo Cluster is still in the process of forming. The colourful stripe in the bottom left comes from foreground emission inside our own galaxy and is known as one of the eROSITA bubbles.
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eROSITA: The X-ray sky opens to the world