- All News & Features
- All Events
- Special Lectures
- K-12 Programs
- Saturday Morning Physics
-
- Subscribe
- Taping
- Past Events
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SMP 12/9/06 | Automobile Efficiencies: Reducing Fuel Use While Improving Safety | Speaker: Marc Ross
- SMP 11/18/06 | Apocalypse Maybe: Speculative Doomsday Scenarios for the End of the Earth | Speaker: Eli Rykoff
- SMP 12/2/06 | Automobile Efficiencies: Reducing Fuel Use While Improving Safety | Speaker: Marc Ross
- SMP 11/11/06 | Apocalypse Maybe: Speculative Doomsday Scenarios for the End of the Earth | Speaker: Eli Rykoff
- SMP 11/4/06 | Apocalypse Maybe: Speculative Doomsday Scenarios for the End of the Earth | Speaker: Eli Rykoff
- SMP 10/28/06 | Higher, Faster, Longer: From Model Rocketry to Rocket Science | Speaker: Andrew Tomasch
- SMP 10/14/06 | Biophysics and Single Molecules – Where Smaller is Better! | Speaker: Gerard Blab
- SMP 10/21/06 | Higher, Faster, Longer: From Model Rocketry to Rocket Science | Speaker: Andrew Tomasch
-
- SMP 12/21/02 | Peering into the Earth: From Earthquakes to Diamonds | Speaker: Wendy Panero
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Seminars & Colloquia
Saturday, October 14, 2006
12:00 AM
170 & 182 Dennison Building
Speaker: Gerhard Blab, Research Fellow (U-M Physics)
Many processes inside a living cell are determined by specific actions of only a small number of molecules. Discover how modern biophysical methods can visualize these processes on length- and time-scales where the physical principles we know from the 'big' world around us have some quite unexpected consequences, and find out why sometimes one must think very small in order to learn more about the big picture.Detailed Information
All talks are free and refreshments will be served. Visitor parking for the seminars (Central Campus) is across the street from the Dennison Building in the U-M Church Street structure. There is a $2.00 parking charge implemented by U-M Parking Services.
Contact Information
For more information regarding the Saturday Morning Physics series, see the Physics Department website, or call 734.764.4437