Pages
December 01, 2014
-
Date:26ThursdayMarch 2015Lecture
Exploring and Exploiting Immune System Variation
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Title Guest SeminarLocation Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Shai S. Shen-Orr, Ph.D.
Department of Immunology Faculty of Medicine and Faculty of Biology, Rappaport Research Institute of Medicine, Technion - Israel Institute of TechnologyOrganizer Department of Systems ImmunologyContact -
Date:26ThursdayMarch 2015Lecture
LIFE SCIENCE LECTURE - Prof. Rony Paz
More information Time 15:00 - 16:00Title Better safe than sorry: mechanisms of [mal]adaptive learningLocation Dolfi and Lola Ebner AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Rony Paz
Department of NeurobiologyContact -
Date:26ThursdayMarch 2015Lecture
Peletron Meeting
More information Time 16:00 - 18:00Contact -
Date:27FridayMarch 2015Conference
Physics without boundaries 2015
More information Time 09:00 - 14:00Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Oren TalContact -
Date:29SundayMarch 2015Conference
50 years of Science Teaching
More information Time All dayChairperson Iris MazorContact -
Date:29SundayMarch 2015Lecture
Life Sciences Special Seminar
More information Time 10:30 - 11:30Title Laser Plasma Accelerators : Principle and Applications for Biology and MedicineLocation Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Prof. Victor Malka
Laboratoire d’Optique AppliquéeContact -
Date:29SundayMarch 2015Lecture
An Energetic Perspective of Ocean Circulation: The Role of the Sub-mesoscales
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Sussman Family Building for Environmental SciencesLecturer Roy Barkan
Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) UCSDOrganizer Department of Earth and Planetary SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The general circulation of the ocean is forced by surface fl...» The general circulation of the ocean is forced by surface fluxes of momentum, heat, and freshwater at basin scales. The kinetic and available potential energy sources associated with these external forces drive a circulation which exhibits flow features that vary on a wide range of spatial and temporal scales. Understanding how the different forcing mechanisms lead to the observed large-scale ocean circulation patterns and to what degree do the various smaller scale processes modify them have been long standing problems for oceanographers.
A large fraction of the kinetic energy in the ocean is stored in the mesoscale eddy field. This `balanced' eddy field is expected, according to geostrophic turbulence theory, to transfer energy to larger scales. In order for the general circulation to remain approximately steady, sub-mesoscale instabilities leading to `loss of balance' (LOB) have been hypothesized to take place so that the eddy kinetic energy (EKE) may be transferred to small scales where it can be dissipated.
We examine the kinetic energy pathways in fully resolved direct numerical simulations of flow in a flat-bottomed re-entrant channel, a configuration that resembles the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. The flow is allowed to reach a statistical steady state at which point it exhibits both a forward and an inverse energy cascade. We show that EKE is dissipated preferentially at small scales near the surface via sub-mesoscale instabilities associated with LOB and a forward energy cascade rather than by bottom drag after an inverse energy cascade. These results highlight the importance of sub-mesoscales dynamics to the general circulation of the oceans.
-
Date:29SundayMarch 2015Lecture
"Mechanisms shaping endoplasmic reticulum"
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Perlman Chemical Sciences BuildingLecturer Prof. Michael Kozlov
Affiliation: Department of Physiology and Pharmacology Sackler Faculty of Medicine Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact -
Date:29SundayMarch 2015Lecture
To be announced
More information Time 13:00 - 13:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Dr. Keren Yacobi-Sharon
Eli Arama's group, Dept. of Molecular Genetics, WISContact -
Date:30MondayMarch 2015Lecture
TBA
More information Time All dayLocation Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Yonit Hoffman + Shimrit Lieber Organizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyContact -
Date:30MondayMarch 2015Conference
LIFE SCIENCES SENIOR SCIENTIST DAY
More information Time 08:00 - 17:00Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Sarel-Jacob FleishmanOrganizer Faculty of Biochemistry , Faculty of BiologyContact -
Date:30MondayMarch 2015Lecture
Life Sciences Senior Scientist Day
More information Time 08:45 - 18:00Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreContact -
Date:30MondayMarch 2015Lecture
Mechanical signaling in stem cell pluripotency
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Perlman Chemical Sciences BuildingLecturer Prof. Kevin Chalut
Department of Physics, Cavendish Laboratory, University of CambridgeOrganizer Clore Center for Biological PhysicsContact -
Date:30MondayMarch 2015Lecture
Modeling and probing the hidden structure of grid cell networks
More information Time 13:00 - 13:00Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain ResearchLecturer John Widloski
University of Texas at AustinOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Grid cell responses develop gradually after eye opening, but...» Grid cell responses develop gradually after eye opening, but little is known about the rules that govern the process. In the first part of the talk, I will present a biologically plausible model for the experience-dependent formation of a grid cell network, one that, among other things, leads to a mature network that can path-integrate velocity inputs, and recapitulates the abrupt transition to stable patterned responses as seen in experiment. The phenomenology of grid cell population activity has rapidly advanced, but, with disparate competing possibilities, the circuit mechanisms underlying grid cell activity remain almost entirely unresolved. In the second part of the talk, I will propose a strategy that combines existing experimental techniques in a way that promises to bring the mechanistic underpinnings of grid cells in sharper focus. The strategy is based on the theoretical insight that small global perturbations of circuit activity will result in characteristic quantal shifts in the spatial tuning relationships between cells, which should be observable from multi- single unit recordings of a small subsample of the population. I will show how this technique allows the experimenter to discriminate between conceptually distinct mechanisms that are currently undifferentiated by experiment. -
Date:30MondayMarch 2015Lecture
Collective computation in nonlinear networks and the grammar of evolvability
More information Time 14:00 - 14:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Jean-Jacques Slotine
MITOrganizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyContact -
Date:30MondayMarch 2015Cultural Events
Movie Docaviv - Tim's Vermir
More information Time 20:30 - 22:00Title With LectureLocation Michael Sela AuditoriumContact -
Date:31TuesdayMarch 2015Conference
National Israeli Astronomy Seminar Day
More information Time All dayLocation The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Boaz KatzOrganizer Melvyn A. Dobrin Center for Nutrition and Plant ResearchContact -
Date:31TuesdayMarch 2015Lecture
TURBULENCE AND RANDOM GEOMETRY
More information Time 10:30 - 10:30Location Neve ShalomLecturer YARON OZ
TEL AVIV UNIVERSITYOrganizer Department of Particle Physics and AstrophysicsContact -
Date:31TuesdayMarch 2015Lecture
Mitochondrial membrane proteins in motion - in situ imaging by live cell superresolution microscopy
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Prof. Dr. Karin Busch
Osnabruck University Osnabruck, GermanyOrganizer Department of Molecular GeneticsContact -
Date:31TuesdayMarch 2015Lecture
Strigolactone signaling for the regulation of root development
More information Time 11:15 - 11:15Location Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Dr. Hinanit Koltai
Institute of Plant Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization-ARO, Volcani Center, Bet-DaganOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact
