829 items matching your search terms.
-
Behind the scenes: Prof. Klaus Desch
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
Behind the scenes: Timo Poller
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
Prof. Desch with pupils and a teacher from the Tannenbusch Gymnasium, a school cooperating with the University of Bonn.
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
The Q&A session after the lecture.
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
... and brought to collision. A detector detects the particles that are produced and makes them "visible"!
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
In particle physics, particles are accelerated in order to investigate unknown processes ...
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
Here you can see for example the trace of a helium core.
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
Experiment 6: Particle detectors, such as a cloud chamber, make traces of particles visible.
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
How can even smaller objects, e.g. elementary particles, be made visible?
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024
-
Prof. Desch at the scattering board, which is an analogy to scattering experiments in particle physics. Fast, small particles, such as electrons, can be used to explore the shape of an invisible target, e.g. a proton.
Located in
News Start
/
Prof. Klaus Desch started the "Kinderuni" in Summer Term 2024