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April 23, 2012
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Date:30SundayJune 2013Lecture
An unexpected link between protein quality control and lipid droplets
More information Time 13:00 - 13:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Ofer Moldavski
Maya Schuldiner's group, Dept. of Molecular Genetics, WISContact -
Date:30SundayJune 2013Lecture
Metabolic Research Forum Seminar
More information Time 15:00 - 15:00Title ER-autophagy cross-talk at center stage of beta-cell stress in diabetesLocation Dolfi and Lola Ebner AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Gil Leibowitz
Department of Medicine, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, JerusalemContact -
Date:01MondayJuly 2013Lecture
Locally Computable Universal One-Way Hash Functions with Linear Shrinkage
More information Time 14:30 - 14:30Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Benny Applebaum
Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:02TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
“Turning CO2 into Liquid Fuel"
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Title Joint Seminar: Organic Chemistry & Materials and InterfaceLocation Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman BuildingLecturer Prof. Matthew Kanan
Department of Chemistry Stanford UniversityOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The longstanding reliance on fossil fuels as the principal e...» The longstanding reliance on fossil fuels as the principal energy source for society has boosted the atmospheric CO2 concentration to a level that is unprecedented in modern geological history. Since the use of carbon-containing fuels is entrenched in society, controlling the atmospheric CO2 concentration may ultimately require recycling CO2 into liquid fuels and commodity chemicals using renewable energy inputs. Arguably the greatest challenge for this vision is to develop efficient CO2 reduction catalysts. This talk will describe our recent development of “oxide-derived” metal nanoparticles as electroreduction catalysts. Oxide-derived metal nanoparticles are prepared by electrochemically reducing metal oxide precursors. This procedure results in highly strained metal nanocrystals. I will describe examples of these catalysts that electrochemically reduce CO2 to CO with exceptional energetic efficiency as well as a catalyst that selectively reduces CO to two-carbon oxygenates. The mechanisms of CO2 and CO reduction will be discussed based on electrokinetic measurements. Metal oxide reduction represents a “top-down” approach to metal nanoparticle synthesis that can result in unique surface structures for catalysis.
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Date:02TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
"Epigenetic and symbiotic mechanisms of inheritance of responses to unforeseen toxicity"
More information Time 11:15 - 11:15Location Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Prof. Yoav Soen
Department of Biological Chemistry, WISOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact -
Date:02TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Rise and fall of mountains on Mars
More information Time 13:00 - 13:00Location Sussman Family Building for Environmental SciencesLecturer Dr. Edwin Kite
Geological and Planetary Sciences California Institute of TechnologyOrganizer Department of Earth and Planetary SciencesContact -
Date:02TuesdayJuly 2013Cultural Events
Yuval Hamevulval
More information Time 17:30 - 17:30Title Children's TheaterLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:03WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
CRISPR - a phage resistance system and a genome engineering tool
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Prof. Rotem Sorek
Department Of Molecular Genetics WISOrganizer Faculty of BiologyHomepage Contact -
Date:03WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
On the greedy walker problem
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Laurent Tournier
University of ParisOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:04ThursdayJuly 2013Lecture
"Regulation of MAPK signaling by PP2C-type phosphatases in Arabidopsis"
More information Time 11:15 - 11:15Location Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Dr. Irute Meskiene
Group Leader, University of Vienna, AustriaOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact -
Date:04ThursdayJuly 2013Lecture
Chemical Physics Special Guest Seminar
More information Time 13:00 - 13:00Title Onset of Irreversibility and Chaos in Amorphous Solids under Periodic ShearLocation Perlman Chemical Sciences BuildingLecturer Dr Ido Regev
Center for Nonlinear Studies Los Alamos National LaboratoryOrganizer Department of Chemical and Biological PhysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about An important aspect of the physics of amorphous solids is th...» An important aspect of the physics of amorphous solids is the onset of irreversible behavior usually associated with yield. Here we study amorphous solids under periodic shear using quasi-static molecular dynamics simulations and observe a transition from reversible to irreversible deformation at a critical strain amplitude. We find that for small strain amplitudes the system exhibits a noisy but repetitive limit-cycle. However, for large strain amplitudes the behavior becomes chaotic (shows sensitivity to initial conditions) and thus irreversible. We suggest that the chaotic behavior is a result of the shear band instabilities that arise for large strains and the convective displacement fields they create. -
Date:04ThursdayJuly 2013Lecture
The Chemical Physics Department Guest Seminar- Prof. Wolfgang Kautek
More information Time 15:00 - 16:00Title Far and near field ultrashort pulse laser processingLocation Perlman Chemical Sciences BuildingLecturer Prof. Wolfgang Kautek
Department of Physical Chemistry, University of ViennaOrganizer Faculty of ChemistryContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The mechanism of nanostructuring by pulsed femtosecond laser...» The mechanism of nanostructuring by pulsed femtosecond laser-based illumination of scanning probe tips was examined in respect to optical-near-field effects. Apertureless near-field scanning force probes at sufficiently high intensities of ns laser and fs laser irradiation can deliver morphological and structural changes in materials at the nanometric level. The SFM tip plasmon response leads to a significant local field enhancement between the tip and substrate. This study is concerned with optical-field enhancement and confinement for an asymmetrically illuminated nanoscopic SFM tip suspended over different materials like gold, graphene, polyphenylen-oxide or polycarbonate according to an apertureless scanning nearfield optical microscope (a-SNOM) -
Date:07SundayJuly 201312FridayJuly 2013Conference
Europhosphatase 2013 - Phosphatases in Health and Disease
More information Time All dayLocation The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Ari ElsonHomepage Contact -
Date:07SundayJuly 2013Lecture
Mixing processes in the Gulf of Eilat/Aqaba (Red Sea): From tidally driven internal waves to surface horizontal mixing
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Sussman Family Building for Environmental SciencesLecturer Daniel F. Carlson
Earth Sciences Institute Hebrew University of JerusalemOrganizer Department of Earth and Planetary SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The Gulf of Eilat is an elongated, deep basin in the norther...» The Gulf of Eilat is an elongated, deep basin in the northern Red Sea. We investigate various mixing processes using recent observational data acquired from a combination of moored platforms and HF coastal radar. We present the first regular ,high vertical resolution profiles of density and velocity and the first deep, long-term profiles of velocity and high frequency temperature measurements collected in the Gulf of Eilat.
> The variability of the stratification and its effect on the magnitude of alongshore semi-diurnal tidal currents in the northern Gulf of Eilat/Aqaba are examined using recent observational data acquired from a combination of moored platforms. The variability of the stratification consists of both periodic and episodic components and occurs over a range of time scales, from hourly to seasonal. Large amplitude, tidally-driven internal waves were observed throughout the year under different stratification conditions. Episodic cooling and warming events were observed during convective mixing in winter and re-stratification in spring. The magnitude of the alongshore semi-diurnal tidal currents is strongly correlated with the stratification.
> Lateral mixing is examined using surface current measured by HF radar. Here, we modify the traditional random-walk stochastic model to include a large-scale flow (obtained from a numerical model, satellite measurements, or HF radar surface current measurements) that varies in both space and time. A stochastic term is added to represent sub-grid-scale, or unresolved, turbulence and is related to the horizontal eddy diffusivity and thousands of virtual particles are transported by the large-scale flow and the stochastic "jumps." The magnitude of the eddy diffusivity is increased until the barrier is no longer present in the flow field, thus providing an estimate of the upper bound of the horizontal eddy diffusivity.
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Date:08MondayJuly 2013Lecture
The Proton Radius Puzzle: A Challenge to all of us
More information Time 16:00 - 17:00Location Tel Aviv University campus, Shriber Bulding, Room 8Lecturer Gerald A. Miller
University of Washington, SeattleOrganizer Department of Particle Physics and AstrophysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The extremely precise extraction of the proton radius by Poh...» The extremely precise extraction of the proton radius by Pohl et al. from the measured energy difference between the 2P and 2S states of muonic hydrogen disagrees significantly with that extracted from electronic hydrogen or elastic electron-proton scattering. This is the proton radius puzzle. The origins of the puzzle and the reasons for believing it to be very significant are explained. Various possible solutions of the puzzle are identified, and the future work needed to resolve the puzzle is discussed. -
Date:09TuesdayJuly 2013Colloquia
Life Sciences Colloquium
More information Time 11:00 - 12:30Title "The bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes, a multifaceted model system and a reference"Location Dolfi and Lola Ebner AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Pascale Cossart
HHMI, Director, Bacteria-cell interactions Unit, Pasteur InstituteContact -
Date:09TuesdayJuly 2013Lecture
"How plant cells eat their own plastids: a unique process that uses selective autophagy"
More information Time 11:15 - 11:15Location Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Dr. Simon Michaeli
at Prof. Gad Galili's lab Dept. of Plant Sciences, WISOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact -
Date:10WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Chiroptical effects of achiral plasmonic structures
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Perlman Chemical Sciences BuildingLecturer Dr. Ben Maoz
School of Chemistry, Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact -
Date:10WednesdayJuly 2013Lecture
Majority Dynamics and the Retention of Information
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Omer Tamuz
Organizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact -
Date:11ThursdayJuly 2013Lecture
Antibody mixtures: a novel strategy to target tumor heterogeneity and tumor plasticity
More information Time 14:00 - 14:00Location Max and Lillian Candiotty BuildingLecturer Dr. Ivan D. Horak
Chief Scientific and Medical Officer Symphogen Inc. DenmarkOrganizer Department of Immunology and Regenerative BiologyContact
