Colloqium to celebrate the retirement of Brian Foster from University Hamburg & DESY

Europe/Berlin
Hörsaal and Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (10.9.) (DESY)

Hörsaal and Elbphilharmonie, Kleiner Saal (10.9.)

DESY

Gudrid Moortgat-Pick (University of Hamburg / DESY), Karsten Buesser (DESY), Marc Wenskat (DESY), Nicholas Walker (DESY), Susan-Katrin Ketels (DESY)
  • Monday 9 September
    • Colloqium DESY Hörsaal

      DESY Hörsaal

      DESY

      DESY Hörsaal

      • 1
        Welcome Addresses
        Moderated by Prof. Dr. Gudrid Moortgat-Pick
      • 2
        Grußwort der Universität Hamburg
        Grußworte von Prof. H. Graener, Dean und Prof. J. Louis
      • 3
        Grußwort Prof. Dr. Joachim Mnich, DESY FH
      • 4
        HERA - Prof. Dr. Eckhard Elsen, CERN
        Slides
      • 5
        The (ILC) Life of Brian - Prof. Dr. Barry Barish, Caltech
        Slides
      • 6
        Coffee Break
      • 7
        ‘The Making of Brian… Oxford and DESY, PETRA and TASSO’- Prof. Dr. Roger Cashmore, Oxford University
        Slides
      • 8
        Plasma - Prof. Dr. Wim Leemans, DESY
    • Reception: Dinner Speech by Prof. Dr. Albrecht Wagner Kantinenanbau

      Kantinenanbau

      DESY

  • Tuesday 10 September
    • Lecture & Concert Kleiner Saal (Elbphilharmonie)

      Kleiner Saal

      Elbphilharmonie

      • 9
        Grußwort - Dr. Enno Aufderheide, Secretary General of the Humboldt Foundation
      • 10
        The quest for the structure of the biological machine that reads our genes
        Everyone has heard of DNA. But by itself, DNA is just an inert blueprint for life. It is the ribosome— an ancient and enormous molecular machine made up of half a million atoms —that makes DNA come to life by turning our genetic code into proteins and therefore into us. My book Gene Machine is a frank insider account of the race for the structure of the ribosome, a fundamental discovery in molecular biology, but one that could also lead to the development of better antibiotics against bacterial infections. But the book is also about the human messiness of science: the twists and turns of my career, initially being an outsider who gave up on physics to become a biologist, and then being the dark horse in a fierce competition with well-established groups. Gene Machine is also a frank and gossipy account of how science is done, with its mixture of insights and persistence as well as blunders and dead ends. It is also honest about how scientists behave, especially when the stakes are high, with their personalities, egos, insecurities and jealousies but also their kindness and generosity.
        Speaker: Prof. Sir Venki Ramakrishnan, PRS
      • 11
        Interval
      • 12
        Concert
        Kotaro Fukuma - Piano Jack Liebeck - Violin Alexandra Raikhlina - Violin Mathieu Herzog - Viola Ugne Tiskute - Viola Thomas Carroll - Cello Gemma Rosefield - Cello
        • a) W.A. Mozart: Sonata for violin and piano in E flat major, K380
        • b) W.A. Mozart: Piano Quartet in E flat major, K493
        • c) Interval
        • d) P.I. Tchaikovsky: String Sextet in D Minor, Op. 70, “Souvenir de Florence”
        • e) Pieces to be announced from the stage