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April 01, 2016
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Date:08SundayMarch 2026Lecture
High Resolution Imaging of an Icy Mars
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Location Stone Administration Building
Zacks hallLecturer Dr. Shane Byrne Organizer Department of Earth and Planetary SciencesAbstract Show full text abstract about Long-term high-resolution orbital imaging at Mars has led to...» Long-term high-resolution orbital imaging at Mars has led to extraordinary advances in understanding martian ice and its connection to climate. Icy seasonal phenomena such as flows in gullies, avalanches, and exotic defrosting patterns characterize the present climate. Interannual variability over a martian decade helps us deduce climatic averages and current trends. Observations of polar ice layers have characterized periodicities related to orbital change over longer timescales up to millions of years.Here, I’ll describe the HiRISE camera and its continued mission to describe a dynamic Mars over 20 years of observations, with a special focus on north polar avalanches. HiRISE has uniquely high resolution and benefits from high signal-to-noise (even at the poles); a near-polar orbit that allows imaging of almost any location within two weeks; color bands that are sensitive to ice; and sufficient imaging stability to construct high-quality meter-scale DTMs. The scientific impact of HiRISE owes much to rapid data releases and community targeting via our online tool HiWISH, ensuring acquisition and analysis of data relevant to today’s scientific questions. -
Date:08SundayMarch 2026Lecture
The Clore Center for Biological Physics
More information Time 13:15 - 14:30Title Collective dynamics of trail-interacting particlesLocation Nella and Leon Benoziyo Physics LibraryLecturer Ram Adar
Lubch at 12:45Contact Abstract Show full text abstract about Trail interactions occur when past particle trajectories bia...» Trail interactions occur when past particle trajectories bias future motion, rendering the system out of thermodynamic equilibrium. While such systems are abundant in nature, their understanding is limited to the single-particle level or phenomenological mean-field theories. Here, we introduce a minimal model of many trail-interacting particles that extends this paradigm to the fluctuating collective level. Particles diffuse while depositing long-lasting repelling/attracting trails that act as a shared memory field, coupling their dynamics across time and space. Using stochastic density functional theory, we derive fluctuating hydrodynamic equations and analyze analytically and numerically the resulting behaviors. We show that memory, coupled with fluctuations, fundamentally reshapes collective dynamics; In the repulsive case, the particle density displays superdiffusive spreading characterized by transient clustering and ballistic motion; In the attractive case, the system condensates in finite time into frozen, localized states. Our results establish general principles for trail-interacting systems and reveal how persistent fields generate novel instabilities and self-organization. -
Date:09MondayMarch 2026Colloquia
The physical logic of protein machines
More information Time 11:00 - 12:15Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. Tsvi Tlusty Homepage Abstract Show full text abstract about Enzymes are usually described through local active-site chem...» Enzymes are usually described through local active-site chemistry. Yet many catalytic cycles recruit global motion that spans the protein fold. This talk traces a physical chain from sequence to function: internal dynamics generate deformation; deformation sharpens specificity; strain carries force across the fold; viscoelasticity sets the operative timescale; and proteins tune one another’s activity. The result is a physical picture in which enzymes act as sequence-encoded viscoelastic machines, with catalysis coupled to mechanics. -
Date:09MondayMarch 2026Lecture
new frontiers in human somatic evolution – from single cells to large cohorts
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Location Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Dan Landau Organizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy Research -
Date:09MondayMarch 2026Lecture
Special Guest Seminar with Prof. Sarah Cohen
More information Time 12:00 - 13:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
Botnar AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Sarah Cohen -
Date:10TuesdayMarch 2026Conference
The 5th International Day of Women in Science
More information Time 08:00 - 08:00Title The 5th International Day of Women in ScienceLocation The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Idit ShacharOrganizer Office for the Advancement of Women in Science and Gender EqualityContact -
Date:10TuesdayMarch 2026Lecture
Measuring conformational equilibria in allosteric proteins with time-resolved tmFRET
More information Time 11:15 - 12:15Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. Sharona Gordon Organizer Department of Chemical and Structural Biology -
Date:10TuesdayMarch 2026Lecture
Sex-Based Network Cooperativity Shapes Cognitive Function in XX and XY Neuronal Models
More information Time 12:30 - 13:30Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. Shani Stern Organizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Sex differences in cognition are well documented, ...» Sex differences in cognition are well documented, but their biological roots - especially network-level origins, remain elusive due to hormonal, environmental, and societal confounds. To isolate genetic effects, we used isogenic iPSC-derived neurons from a rare mosaic Klinefelter donor. Utilizing calcium imaging assays, we revealed a temporal divergence in maturation as XY networks show augmented connectivity patterns early on, while XX networks surpass them later on. Conversely, XY networks exhibit an increasing level of synchronization over time, while XX networks exhibit more connections. We demonstrate that such features alone accurately classify independent XX/XY networks, revealing a robust, generalizable signature.Simulating information flow revealed faster, broader spread in XY networks at later developmental stages, indicating differences in function. Modeling cognitive tasks, we found XY networks enable faster, more accurate focused problem-solving, while XX networks excel in parallel information processing. This suggests that chromosomal composition shapes cognition via inherent differences in network topology.To mechanistically unify the findings, we introduced a generative network model governed by a single parameter p (cooperativity), which controls how local synchrony is amplified into global connectivity. Varying p generated a family of networks spanning hypocooperative, optimal, and hypercooperative regimes, simultaneously moderating topology and link weights. Remarkably, empirical XX and XY networks map onto distinct regions of the cooperativity landscape, as XX networks cluster closer to an intermediate p-range, whereas XY networks exhibit higher effective cooperativity.Together, our results identify cooperativity as a unifying, quantitative biomarker linking chromosome composition to network topology and emergent cognitive function. This work reveals fundamental sex-based differences in cortical network organization and provides a principled framework for sex-aware neuroscience, with implications for personalized diagnostics and targeted interventions. -
Date:11WednesdayMarch 2026Academic Events
Scientific Council Meeting
More information Time 10:00 - 12:00Location The David Lopatie Conference Centre
KIMELContact -
Date:11WednesdayMarch 2026Lecture
Seminar for PhD Thesis Defense
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Title Rethinking Enthesis Biology: Postnatal Development and Healing of the Tendon–Bone AttachmentLocation Botnar Auditorium, Belfer buildingLecturer Ron Carmel Vinestock -
Date:12ThursdayMarch 2026Lecture
Leveraging single cell technologies to engineer the immune system
More information Time 08:38 - 09:38Location Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Ido Amit Organizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy Research -
Date:12ThursdayMarch 2026Lecture
PhD Defense Seminar- Roni Beiralas
More information Time 10:30 - 11:30Title Marine bacterial pathogenicity in the context of biotic and abiotic factorsLocation Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Plant and Environmental Sciences
cafeteria, floor 0Contact -
Date:12ThursdayMarch 2026Lecture
special seminar Clore Center for Biological Physics
More information Time 13:15 - 14:30Title Geometric constraints during epithelial jammingLocation Weismann AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Jeffrey Fredberg
lunch at 12:45Contact Abstract Show full text abstract about As an injury heals, an embryo develops or a carcinoma invade...» As an injury heals, an embryo develops or a carcinoma invades, epithelial cells systematically change their shape. But where do cell shape and its variability come from? Members of my lab have shown that cell shape and shape variability are mutually constrained through a relationship that is purely geometrical. Across many epithelial systems, shape variability collapses to a family of distributions that is common to all. Although we have characterized many of the molecular events that are needed for any complete theory of cell shape and cell packing, observations point to the hypothesis that jamming behavior at cellular scales of organization sets overriding geometric constraints. -
Date:16MondayMarch 202618WednesdayMarch 2026Conference
Workshop on sustainability of mathematics education implementation projects
More information Time 08:00 - 08:00Title Workshop on sustainability of mathematics education implementation projectsLocation The David Lopatie Conference CentreChairperson Jason CooperContact -
Date:16MondayMarch 2026Lecture
Global mapping of enterovirus mutations altering sensitivity to temperature and type I interferon
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Dr. Ron Geller Organizer Department of Chemical and Structural Biology -
Date:17TuesdayMarch 2026Lecture
Special Guest Seminar by Prof. Ophir Shalem
More information Time 09:30 - 10:30Location Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
Auditorium -
Date:17TuesdayMarch 2026Lecture
Peptide mimicry with semicarbazides towards the development of treatments for Alzheimer’s disease and atherosclerosis
More information Time 11:15 - 12:15Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. William D. Lubell Organizer Department of Chemical and Structural Biology -
Date:17TuesdayMarch 2026Lecture
MVP Monthly Webinar Invitation - EverestBiolab
More information Time 15:00 - 16:00Location https://events.teams.microsoft.com/event/350bbe8f-7ab7-4342-ac5b-ca9c9e77afdc@b437bddc-ac1e-43a5-8af6-cd15f80a9304Lecturer Dr. Tal Gilboa
Dear Colleagues,As part of the Multidisciplinary Vesicle Program Webinar Series, we are pleased to invite you to a special session in collaboration with Everest Biolabs, focusing on advanced automation solutions for EV isolation and characterization, from early discovery to large cohort studies.Dr. Tal Gilboa, Co founder and Head of Research at Everest Biolabs, will present innovative automated platforms designed to enhance standardization, reproducibility and true scalability in EV research. The webinar will demonstrate how transitioning from manual workflows to intelligent automation improves efficiency, reduces experimental variability and enables high throughput processing of large sample sets while maintaining analytical precision.Date: March 17, 15:00 ISTRegistration link:https://events.teams.microsoft.com/event/350bbe8f-7ab7-4342-ac5b-ca9c9e77afdc@b437bddc-ac1e-43a5-8af6-cd15f80a9304In addition, Everest Biolabs will participate in EVTech26, which will take place at the Weizmann Institute of Science. The company will showcase its systems and technologies on site, providing attendees with the opportunity to engage directly with the team and experience the platforms firsthand.https://conferences.weizmann.ac.il/EVTech2026/AviOrganizer Department of Life Sciences Core FacilitiesContact -
Date:18WednesdayMarch 2026Lecture
Life Sciences Luncheon
More information Time 12:30 - 14:00Title Prof. Yonatan StelzerLocation Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Yonatan Stelzer Contact -
Date:19ThursdayMarch 2026Lecture
2025-2026 Spotlight on Science Seminar Series by Dr. Hyla Allouche-Arnon (Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science)
More information Time 12:30 - 14:00Title The Magnetic Glow of Reporter Genes: Using MRI to Map Gene ExpressionLocation Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Hyla Allouche-Arnon Contact
