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Press Archive 2021

08.12.21: Innovative cooling technique of the BASE collaboration among the Physics World Top 10 Breakthroughs in 2021

An innovative particle cooling technique of the BASE collaboration has been selected to be among the Physics World Top 10 Breakthroughs in 2021 external Link.

In 2021, our former division member Dr. Matthew Bohman and the BASE collaboration external Link demonstrated the first sympathetic cooling of a single proton using a cryogenic two-Penning-trap system in "Natureexternal Link (see our news of 25.08.21). To this end, the single proton was stored in a proton trap and a cloud of Be+ ions in a separate beryllium trap. The coupling was realized by connecting the two Penning traps to a superconducting cryogenic LC circuit with resonance frequency near their axial frequencies. This new cooling technique allows to reach proton temperatures far below the environment temperature. In the demonstration measurement, the proton temperature was reduced by 85%, from 17 K environment temperature to 2,6 K.

The novel sympathetic laser-cooling technique will enable enhanced precision experiments of any charged species at lower temperatures. In particular, it can be readily applied to cool protons and antiprotons in the same large macroscopic traps that enable precision measurements of the charge-to-mass ratio and g-factor. This will allow for improved precision in matter-antimatter comparisons and dark matter searches, performed by the BASE collaboration.

Please also read the related press release of the MPIK external Link.

17.11.21: Andreas Wolf received the Dieter Möhl Medal Award 2021
Andreas Wolf, winner of the Dieter Möhl Medal Award 2021.
Andreas Wolf, winner of the Dieter Möhl Medal Award 2021.

Our group leader in the research field "Molecular quantum dynamics and stored ion beams" Apl. Prof. Andreas Wolf received the Dieter Möhl Medal Award 2021 "for his pioneering work in the use of low energy electron coolers in merging electron beams for atomic and molecular physics studies."
The award was presented during the virtual 13th International Workshop COOL 2021 externer Link on November 5, 2021.

The Dieter Möhl Medal is a award sponsored by the European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN to honor individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the development and application of particle beam cooling. It was first awarded at COOL 2013 in Mürren for the memorial of Dr. Dieter Möhl, who was one of the pioneers in the field of beam cooling and its applications.

We cordially congratulate Andreas Wolf on receiving this special scientific award.

Please read more in the press release of the MPIK external Link.


30.09.21: Klaus Blaum receives the Otto Hahn Prize 2021
Klaus Blaum, award winner of the Otto Hahn Prize 2021
Klaus Blaum, award winner of the Otto Hahn Prize 2021.
© Stefanie Aumiller / Max Planck Society

Our division director Prof. Klaus Blaum has been selected to receive the Otto Hahn Prize 2021. Klaus Blaum is honored for his outstanding research in the field of precision physics and measurement technology that expands our knowledge of the fundamental properties of the constituents of the matter surrounding us.

Since 2005, the Otto Hahn Prize externer Link has been awarded jointly by the City of Frankfurt am Main externer Link, the Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker externer Link (GDCh, German Chemical Society) and the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft externer Link (DPG, German Physical Society). The prize is named after the Frankfurt-born scientist Otto Hahn, who discovered nuclear fission and won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1944.
According to its statute, the Otto Hahn Prize serves to "promote science, especially in the fields of chemistry, physics and applied engineering through the recognition of outstanding scientific achievements". It consists of a gold medal and a prize of 50,000 euros. The prize is awarded every two years with a ceremony in St. Paul’s Church, Frankfurt am Main, Germany, alternating each time between physics and chemistry.

The award ceremony of the Otto Hahn Prize 2021 will take place on November 5, 2021 in St. Paul’s Church, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.

We cordially congratulate Klaus Blaum on receiving this prestigious scientific award.

Please read more in the following press releases:


02.09.21: Jonas Karthein has been awarded the SMuK Dissertation Prize 2021

Our former division member Dr. Jonas Karthein has been awarded the Dissertation Prize 2021 of the Matter and Cosmos Section externer Link (SMuK) of the German Physical Society (DPG).
The goal of the SMuK Dissertation Prize externer Link is to acknowledge the outstanding research within the scope of a dissertation and its excellent presentation in a lecture. The prize is endowed with 1.500.

Jonas Karthein received the award for his PhD thesis and the presentation entitled "Next-Generation Mass Spectrometry of Exotic sotopes and Isomers". The prize was awarded on the SMuK Online Meeting 2021 externer Link.
The cumulative dissertation comprises the transition of the high-precision mass spectrometer ISOLTRAP at ISOLDE/CERN from the well-established Penning-trap mass spectrometry (PTMS) technique, ToF-ICR (Time-of-Flight Ion Cyclotron Resonance), to the next-generation PTMS technique, called PI-ICR (Phase-Imaging Ion Cyclotron Resonance).

We cordially congratulate Jonas on receiving this distinction of his scientific work.

Further information:

02.06.21: Stefan Dickopf receives the Otto-Haxel-Preis

Our division member Stefan Dickopf receives the Otto Haxel Prize of the Department of Physics and Astronomy of Heidelberg University for his excellent master thesis entitled "Design, installation and characterisation of a microwave transmission line for driving the transitions of the 3He+ hyperfine structure in a Penning trap".
The prize for the best experimental master thesis is endowed with 500 €.

We cordially congratulate Stefan on receiving this distinction of his scientific work.

Further information:

  • Full text of master thesis: PuRe externer Link
22.04.21: Achim Schwenk has been awarded an ERC Advanced Grant

Our Max Planck Fellow Professor Achim Schwenk external Link of TU Darmstadt has been awarded a prestigious Advanced Grant external Link by the European Research Council (ERC).
His research project "Exploring the Universe through Strong Interactions" (EUSTRONG) will be funded with around 2.3 million euros over a period of 5 years. The aim of the EUSTRONG project is to investigate the Strong Interaction, one of the four fundamental forces of nature, in the universe.

This is already the second ERC grant for Achim Schwenk. We cordially congratulate him on receiving this distinction!

Please read more in the press releases of the MPIK external Link, the TU Darmstadt external Link and the ERC external Link.