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Leipzig s Botanical Garden is humming and buzzing again

Emergency Associations of German Science new study on the history of the DFG from 1920 to 1973

 E-Mail A recently published study entitled Notgemeinschaften der Wissenschaft ( Emergency Associations of Science ) takes a comprehensive and critical look at the history of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation), examining science-driven research funding in Germany in the first half of the organisation s 100-year existence. Historian Professor Dr. Patrick Wagner traces the development of the DFG from the founding of its predecessor organisation in 1920, through the Weimar Republic and the National Socialist era to its re-establishment after the Second World War and its development in the Federal Republic of Germany up until the early 1970s. Spanning a historical arc of five decades and three political systems, the study sheds light on the roots of the DFG s role in research funding and the research system - in which it continues to be a defining force - as well as examining the relationship between science and the humanities and politics in Germany

Study: Important contribution to spintronics has received little consideration until now

 E-Mail The movement of electrons can have a significantly greater influence on spintronic effects than previously assumed. This discovery was made by an international team of researchers led by physicists from the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU). Until now, a calculation of these effects took, above all, the spin of electrons into consideration. The study was published in the journal Physical Review Research and offers a new approach in developing spintronic components. Many technical devices are based on conventional semiconductor electronics. Charge currents are used to store and process information in these components. However, this electric current generates heat and energy is lost. To get around this problem, spintronics uses a fundamental property of electrons known as spin. This is an intrinsic angular momentum, which can be imagined as a rotational movement of the electron around its own axis, explains Dr Annika Johansson, a physicist at MLU. The spin

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