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Universe of Scales: From Nanotechnology to Cosmology electronic resource Symposium in Honor of Minoru M. Freund / edited by Friedemann Freund, Stephanie Langhoff.

Contributor(s): Freund, Friedemann [editor.] | Langhoff, Stephanie [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: Springer Proceedings in PhysicsPublication details: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: VI, 206 p. 125 illus., 77 illus. in color. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319022079Subject(s): physics | Astrophysics | Physics | Measurement Science and Instrumentation | Extraterrestrial Physics, Space Sciences | Nanoscale Science and Technology | Cosmology | Low Temperature PhysicsDDC classification: 530.8 LOC classification: T50Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Part I: Memories of a Great Life -- Mino’s Smile.- Mino in Adjectives -- With Mino on the Road -- Phone Call at 2 am -- Witness to a Formidable Dialogue -- Stunning Intellect and Pure Mind -- Growing up -- Poem -- Part II: Science Chapters -- Mino in Japan: The Infrared Telescope in Space -- Mino’s Sense of Stardust -- How Brains Make Decisions -- From Neurons to Neutrinos -- Modeling the Whole Earth System -- Microsatellite Ionospheric Network in Orbit -- Formation Flying, Cosmology and General Relativity -- Earthquake Precursor Research using Radio Tomography of the Ionosphere -- Pre-Earthquake Signals at the Ground Level -- Rock Softening with Consequences for Earthquake Science -- Steerable Nanobots for Diagnosis and Therapy -- Causal Factors for Brain Tumor and Targeted Strategies.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The presentations at this NASA-hosted Symposium in honor of Mino Freund will touch upon the fields, to which his prolific mind has made significant contributions. These include low temperature physics, cosmology, and nanotechnology with its wide-ranging applicability to material science, neuroscience, Earth sciences and satellite technology.  To learn more about Mino’s career you can download the "Tribute" <http://multimedia.seti.org/mino/Tribute.pdf>, which outlines his journey from (i) low-temperature physics and superconductivity at the ETH Zürich to (ii) building one remarkable milliKelvin refrigerator for the US-Japan IRTS mission at UC Berkeley and ISAS in Japan to (iii) a decade in cosmology, to (iv) being on the micro-bolometer team at NASA Goddard for the HAWC instrument on SOFIA, to (v) developing at AFRL the nanotechnology portfolio for the entire Air Force.  This was followed by six years at the NASA Ames Research Center, where Mino formulated his far-ahead ideas about swarms of capable nanosats circling the Earth, which have since started to become a reality. He engaged in a broad range of nanotechnology projects, including novel applications in neuroscience well before he himself was struck by the deadly brain tumor.
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Part I: Memories of a Great Life -- Mino’s Smile.- Mino in Adjectives -- With Mino on the Road -- Phone Call at 2 am -- Witness to a Formidable Dialogue -- Stunning Intellect and Pure Mind -- Growing up -- Poem -- Part II: Science Chapters -- Mino in Japan: The Infrared Telescope in Space -- Mino’s Sense of Stardust -- How Brains Make Decisions -- From Neurons to Neutrinos -- Modeling the Whole Earth System -- Microsatellite Ionospheric Network in Orbit -- Formation Flying, Cosmology and General Relativity -- Earthquake Precursor Research using Radio Tomography of the Ionosphere -- Pre-Earthquake Signals at the Ground Level -- Rock Softening with Consequences for Earthquake Science -- Steerable Nanobots for Diagnosis and Therapy -- Causal Factors for Brain Tumor and Targeted Strategies.

The presentations at this NASA-hosted Symposium in honor of Mino Freund will touch upon the fields, to which his prolific mind has made significant contributions. These include low temperature physics, cosmology, and nanotechnology with its wide-ranging applicability to material science, neuroscience, Earth sciences and satellite technology.  To learn more about Mino’s career you can download the "Tribute" <http://multimedia.seti.org/mino/Tribute.pdf>, which outlines his journey from (i) low-temperature physics and superconductivity at the ETH Zürich to (ii) building one remarkable milliKelvin refrigerator for the US-Japan IRTS mission at UC Berkeley and ISAS in Japan to (iii) a decade in cosmology, to (iv) being on the micro-bolometer team at NASA Goddard for the HAWC instrument on SOFIA, to (v) developing at AFRL the nanotechnology portfolio for the entire Air Force.  This was followed by six years at the NASA Ames Research Center, where Mino formulated his far-ahead ideas about swarms of capable nanosats circling the Earth, which have since started to become a reality. He engaged in a broad range of nanotechnology projects, including novel applications in neuroscience well before he himself was struck by the deadly brain tumor.

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