8th January 2014

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Event Name CRISTALLI!
Start Date 6th Oct 2013
End Date 2nd Mar 2014
Duration 148 days and 1 hour
Description

Crystals - known to everybody as gems, snow crystals, or salt grains - are widespread in the nature around us. The investigation of their structure and properties means looking inside the intimate of atom geometries - a look contributing to the scientific development of chemistry, solid state physics, Earth sciences, and even, surprisingly, biology and medicine.

A century has passed since the crystals first revealed their secrets. In the meantime crystallography has become the pillar of the atomic and molecular sciences, showing us the structure of DNA, allowing the comprehension and the development of computer memories, visualizing the formation of proteins within cells, and yielding ever new materials and drugs.

This is why on July 2012, resolution 66/284 of the General Assembly of the United Nations declared 2014 - after 100 years from the awarding of the first Nobel Prize for the discovery of the diffraction of X-rays by crystals - the International Year of Crystallography.

The exhibition organized at the University of Padova wishes to celebrate the theoretical and applied aspects of crystallography on the occasion of the International Year.

See the photos of the exhibition taken during the Opening Ceremony on 5 October 2013


Location Padova
Italy
Contact Gilberto Artioli
cristalli.centromusei@unipd.it
URL http://www.geoscienze.unipd.it/cristalli/welcome.html
Category exhibitions

Event Name Crystals: Beauty, Science, Structure
Start Date 7th Nov 2013
End Date 30th Mar 2014
Duration 144 days
Description

From gigantic and exotic cave formations to everyday ingredients such as salt and sugar, crystals are all around us. In our latest special exhibition – Crystals: Beauty, Science, Structure – we look at the history of the study of crystals, an endeavour which has prized their mysterious and natural beauty, as well as probed their fundamental atomic structures.

In the middle ages, natural minerals were thought to carry occult properties, perhaps suggested by their startling array of colours and geometric forms. These regular forms promised a special insight into nature and from the 17th century onwards they were exactly measured and their symmetries exhaustively classified.

At the turn of the 20th century even deeper secrets were illuminated by the ground-breaking technique of x-ray crystallography. Today, crystallography is the hidden science behind many aspects of our lives.

This year, 2013, celebrates the centenary of the pioneering work of father and son William and Lawrence Bragg, which laid the foundations for the science of x-ray crystallography. The International Year of Crystallography takes place during 2014.


Location Oxford Museum of History of Science
United Kingdom
Contact Mike Glazer
glazer@physics.ox.ac.uk
URL http://blogs.mhs.ox.ac.uk/mhs/crystals-beauty-science-structure/
Category exhibitions

Event Name L'enigma Escher
Start Date 19th Oct 2013
End Date 23rd Mar 2014
Duration 156 days and 1 hour
Description

“L’ENIGMA ESCHER- PARADOSSI GRAFICI TRA ARTE E GEOMETRIA” is the title of a major retrospective exhibition of the work of Maurits Cornelis Escher, on display in Reggio Emilia until 23 March 2014.

The exhibition presents the work of the Dutch graphic artist from his debut on the scene to his latest years, bringing together 130 works, including lithographs, etchings and drawings, on loan from museums, libraries and national institutes – among which the Galleria d’Arte Moderna of Rome and the Fondazione Wolfsoniana of Genoa – as well as from some important, private collections.

A special section is dedicated to tilings, with a panel illustrating the 17 crystallographic planar groups and some original examples of Escher's plane-filling drawings.

The exhibition will then move to Caraglio (Cuneo, Italy), where it will be on display from 29 March to 29 June.

The exhibition is included in the events for IYCr2014 celebrations in Italy. 

Read the press release mentioning the connection of the exhibition with IYCr2014 (in Italian)

 


Location Reggio Emilia
Italy
Contact Federica Franceschini
f.franceschini@palazzomagnani.it
URL http://www.palazzomagnani.it/2013/07/lenigma-escher/
Category exhibitions

Event Name Platonic Solids and Quasicrystals - Moments in the History of Crystallography
Start Date 30th May 2013
End Date 4th May 2014
Duration 340 days
Description

This year's exhibition at Carolina Rediviva, Platonic Solids and Quasicrystals, is all about crystallography and shows how this science has been perceived over time. By collaborating with the Museum of Evolution at Uppsala University, we can exhibit books side by side with real crystals, models of crystals and instruments that have been used to measure the angles of these strange formations that seem to have been cut and polished by human hand whereas in fact they have been shaped by uniform atomic structures.

Welcome on a beautiful journey through this collection of historical scientific books and artifacts.


Location Uppsala
Sweden
Contact Johan Kjellman
johan.kjellman@em.uu.se
URL http://www.ub.uu.se/en/Just-now/Exhibitions/Current-exhibitions/
Category exhibitions

Event Name NIS colloquium on "Time and space resolved techniques with Synchrotron Radiation beams"
Start Date 8th Jan 2014 9:30am
End Date 8th Jan 2014 6:30pm
Duration 9 hours
Description

It is a one-day event with open access (no registration fee), where scientists working on some synchrotron radiation facilities meet users and potential users to improve the mutual collaborations in the fields of time and space resolved X-ray absorption and scattering techniques. The workshop will be held at Centro della Innovazione (Room 20), Università degli Studi di Torino, Via Quarello 15/A, Turin. 

  

PROGRAMME

Chair: Carmelo Prestipino – Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS, France)

9:30–9:45

Carlo LambertiNIS, CrisDI, University of Turin, INSTM Consortium
Introduction to the Colloquium

9:45–10:15

Gema Martinez-Criado – European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF)
Exploring single nanowires with a multimodal hard X-ray nanoprobe

10:15–10:35

Chiara Groppo & Carlo Lamberti Department of Earth Sciences, University of Turin
Garnets-onphacites: petrological problems, experimental approaches and data analysis

10:35–11:05

Lorenzo Mino Department of Chemistry, University of Turin
Synchrotron radiation for the characterization of low dimensional system

11:05–11:35

Coffee Break

 

Chair: Gema Martinez-Criado European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF)

11:35–11:55

Alessandro Pagliero Department of Physics, University of Turin
Towards a possible photoresist free X-ray photolithography using a synchrotron nano-beam

11:55–12:25

Luca SalassaCIC biomaGUNE (Spain)
Photoactivation of transition metal complexes using nanoparticles

12:25–12:55

Luca BoarinoIstituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica (INRIM)
SR experiments for the comprehension of self-assembling mechanisms in diblock copolymers systems

12:55–14:30

Lunch

 

Chair: Luca Salassa CIC biomaGUNE (Spain)

14:30–15:00

Alessandro Longo or Giuseppe PortaleDUBBLE Beamline at the ESRF
Combined time resolved SAX/XAS experiments at BM26

15:00–15:30

Giovanni Agostini or Sakura Pascarelli – European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF)
Time resolved XAS experiment in Q-EXAFS and in dispersive set ups (BM23 and ID24) 

15:30–15:50

Claudio Garino Department of Chemistry, University of Turin
Excited state dynamics and photochemistry of transition metal complexes. Part 1: insight from computational analysis

15:50–16:10

Elisa Borfecchia – Department of Chemistry, University of Turin & INSTM
Excited state dynamics and photochemistry of transition metal complexes. Part 2: insight from synchrotron ultrafast X-ray techniques

16:10–16:40

Coffee Break

 

Chair: Alessandro Longo or Giuseppe PortaleDUBBLE Beamline at ESRF

16:40–17:10

Erik Gallo European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF)
Time Resolved X-ray Emission Spectroscopy: a useful tool for the investigation of spin-cross-over systems

17:10–17:40

Diego Gianolio – Diamond Light Source
Potentialities of XAS/XES beamlines at Diamond

17:40–18:10

Carmelo Prestipino – Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS, France)
Multivariate data analysis: how to handle a huge amount of data

18.10–18:30

Marco Milanesio – Dipartimento Sci. & Innovaz. Tecnol., Università del Piemonte Orientale
Chemical selectivity in structure determination by modulation enhanced X-ray diffraction: proof of principle by simulated and real experiments

Participation is free, registration is required: please send an e-mail to claudio.garino@unito.it

 


Location Turin
Italy
Contact Carlo LAMBERTI
carlo.lamberti@unito.it
URL http://www.nis.unito.it/colloquia/NIS-Colloquia.html
Category conferences

Event Name "Quasicrystals" lecture
Start Date 8th Jan 2014 7:00pm
End Date 8th Jan 2014 8:30pm
Duration 1 hour and 30 minutes
Description Introduction to "Quasicrystals" by Dr. Paul Steinhardt (who coined the term), Albert Einstein Professor in Science and Director of the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science at Princeton University


Location New York City
United States of America
Contact Mitch Portnoy
mitchpnyc@aol.com
URL
Category lectures