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HELMHOLTZ ASSOCIATION Berit Dannenberg
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PAGE 2 HERMANN VON HELMHOLTZ Universal scholar with a sense for the practical Achievements: - Ophthalmoscope for examining the retina - Three-component theory of colour vision - Principles of tone colour through harmonics - Resonance theory of hearing - First law of thermodynamics on the conservation of energy Founding President of the Physikalisch- Technische Reichsanstalt Hermann von Helmholtz (31 August 1821 – 8 September 1894)
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PAGE 3 FACTS AND FIGURES 16 research centres with 240 institutes 28,000 staff 9,000 scientists & engineers 4,400 doctoral students 1,700 apprentices Budget: 2.8 billion € 1.9 bn € institutional funding 0.9 bn € third party funding Helmholtz Centre Branch of a Helmholtz Centre Helmholtz Head Office List Helgoland BremerhavenGeesthachtHamburg Greifswald Braunschweig Wolfenbüttel- Remlingen Göttingen Magdeburg Potsdam Berlin Zeuthen Teltow Niemegk Halle Leipzig Bad Lauchstädt Köln Jülich Bonn Darmstadt Heidelberg Lampoldshausen Karlsruhe Stuttgart München GarchingNeuherberg Oberpfaffenhofen
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PAGE 4 16 RESEARCH CENTRES Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY German Cancer Research Center German Centre for Neurodegenerative Diseases Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt Forschungszentrum Jülich Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research GKSS Research Centre Geesthacht Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research Helmholtz Zentrum München German Research Center for Environmental Health Helmholtz Centre Potsdam GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Max Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (associated) The Helmholtz Association is an umbrella organisation of 16national research centres all established after 1950.
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PAGE 5 NATIONAL LABS WITH A MISSION Solving grand challenges with cutting-edge research Developing and operating complex infrastructure and large-scale facilities for the national and international scientific community Creating wealth for society and industry by knowledge transformation and innovation
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PAGE 6 LARGE-SCALE FACILITIES & INFRASTRUCTURE Managing national and international networks and consortia, e.g. tsunami early warning system Developing, building and operating large-scale facilities, e.g. ITER, XFEL, FAIR Providing complex infrastructure, e.g. research vessels, supercomputers, mouse facilities
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PAGE 7 CUTTING-EDGE SCIENCE IN NETWORKS The six research fields Energy Earth & Environment Health Key Technologies Structure of Matter Aeronautics, Space and Transport
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PAGE 8 RESEARCH FIELD ENERGY For Example: Reducing CO 2 Emissions Solar-thermal power stations Bioliq pilot plant Geothermal pilot plant CO 2 sequestration and CO 2 separation with membranes
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PAGE 9 RESEARCH FIELD EARTH & ENVIRONMENT For Example: Understanding Climate Change Polar research with ice breaker Polarstern and Neumayer station Understanding atmospheric changes with HALO airplane Earth observation with satellites
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PAGE 10 RESEARCH FIELD HEALTH For Example: Combating Major Common Diseases Nobel Prize 2008 to Harald zur Hausen for discovering connection between viral infections and cancer Vaccination against cervix cancer Heavy ion cancer therapy From bench to bedside: translational research New: Helmholtz Centre for Neurodegenerative Diseases
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PAGE 11 RESEARCH FIELD KEY TECHNOLOGIES For example: Promoting Innovation Nobel Prize 2007 to Helmholtz Researcher Peter Grünberg for discovering GMR effect Supercomputers JUBL, JUGENE Nanotechnology
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PAGE 12 RESEARCH FIELD STRUCTURE OF MATTER For Example: Operating Large Scale Facilities European XFEL: films from the nanocosmos Pilot plant FLASH FAIR: understanding the secrets of matter
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PAGE 13 RESEARCH FIELD AERONAUTICS, SPACE AND TRANSPORT For Example: Space Exploration Columbus space lab at International Space station ISS Earth observation with satellites, e.g. TerraSAR-X, EnviSAT European satellite navigation system GALILEO
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PAGE 14 HELMHOLTZ INTERNATIONAL Successful in Europe: participation in 693 projects, 36% success rate with EU applications; 63% with infrastructure applications Base for new large-scale facilities with international participation, e.g. XFEL, FAIR Participation in international projects, e.g. ITER Liaison offices in Brussels, Moscow, Beijing Bilateral partnerships around the world 4,500 visiting scientists at large-scale facilities
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PAGE 15 PROMOTING YOUNG TALENTS Structured training of doctoral students 6 Graduate Schools and 7 Helmholtz Research Schools 116 Helmholtz Young Investigators Groups (tenure option) Helmholtz Management Academy 1,700 apprentices 24 Helmholtz School Labs Tiny Tots Science Corner
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Helmholtz Research Schools Focused on a specific research field Outstanding participants from germany and abroad Promotion within 3 years - interdisciplinary scientific education - soft skills Financial support Language: English
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Helmholtz Research Schools Biosoft – International Helmholtz Research School on Biophysics and Soft Matter Helmholtz International Research School for Infection Biology Helmholtz International Research School in Molecular Neurobiology Helmholtz International Research School in Translational Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine Helmholtz Research School for Quark Matter Studies in Heavy Ion Collisions Helmholtz Space Life Sciences Research School Helmholtz Earth System Science Research School
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Helmholtz Graduate Schools Aim: To establish a structured doctoral training in all Helmholtz Centres All PhD students are members of the Graduate School Graduate Scholl offers (interdisciplinary) scientific training and soft skill courses Doctoral committee for each PhD Student Transparent processes and clear mutual responsibilities
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Helmholtz Graduate Schools HIGRADE - Helmholtz Interdisciplinary Graduate School for Environmental Research (Leipzig) Helmholtz Graduate School Molecular Cell Biology (Berlin) Helmholtz International Graduate School of Cancer Research (Heidelberg) POLMAR – Helmholtz Graduate School for Polar and Marine Research (Bremerhaven) Helmholtz Graduate School for Hadron and Ion Research (Darmstadt) Helmholtz Graduate School for Infection Research (Braunschweig)
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SEITE 20 Helmholtz Young Investigator Groups For foreign or german scientists abroad Establishing of a cooperation network scientific independence in an early career stage Good financial and material resources for research Reliable career prospects based on proven research performance Jointly appointed Junior Professorship
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Offer to the Young Investigator Group Leaders 250.000 per year (staff, infrastructure, material) Funding period of 5 years Responsibilty for budget and personnel Possibility to use the large scale facilities and infrastructure of the Helmholtz Centre Network Cooperation with university (supervising of PhD Students, teaching) Tenure Option Soft Skill Course: Leadership
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SEITE 22 Requirements International Call for Proposals (Science, Nature) Requirements 2-6 years after PhD 6 month stay abroad (for Germans) Scientific excellence Selection process First selection by the Helmholtz Centre Written assessments from international reviewers an interdisciplinary panel decides on the basis of an oral presentation and the written votes
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SEITE 23 Thank you for your attention!
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