Max Planck Institute for Cell Biology
The Max Planck Institute for Cell Biology was located in Ladenburg, Germany. It was founded 1947 as Max Planck Institute for Oceanic biology in Wilhelmshaven, after renaming in 1968, it was moved to Ladenburg 1977 under the direction of Hans-Georg Schweiger. It was closed 1 July 2003. It was one of 80 institutes in the Max Planck Society (Max Planck Gesellschaft).
External links
- Homepage of the Max Planck Institute for Cell Biology
49°28′12″N 8°38′14″E / 49.47000°N 8.63722°E / 49.47000; 8.63722
- v
- t
- e
Max Planck Society
- Evolutionary Anthropology
- Social Anthropology
- Astronomy
- Astrophysics
- Art History (Rome)
- Art History (Florence)
- Biochemistry
- Biogeochemistry
- Biological Intelligence
- Biology of Ageing
- Molecular Biomedicine
- Biophysics
- Brain Research
- Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics
- Chemistry
- Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
- Research on Collective Goods
- Colloids and Interfaces
- Study of Crime, Security and Law
- Biological Cybernetics
- Demographic Research
- Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity
- Dynamics and Self-Organization
- Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems
- Chemical Ecology
- Chemical Energy Conversion
- Evolutionary Biology
- Neuroscience (Florida)
- Friedrich Miescher Laboratory
- Fritz Haber Institute
- Molecular Genetics
- Gravitational Physics
- Heart and Lung Research
- History of Science
- Human Development
- Science of Human History
- Immunobiology and Epigenetics
- Infection Biology
- Informatics
- Innovation and Competition
- Intelligent Systems
- Coal Research
- Tax Law and Public Finance
- Comparative Public Law and International Law
- Comparative and International Private Law
- Social Law and Social Policy
- European Legal History
- Mathematics
- Mathematics in the Sciences
- Medical Research
- Meteorology
- Marine Microbiology
- Terrestrial Microbiology
- Microstructure Physics
- Multidisciplinary Sciences
- Neurobiology of Behavior
- Ornithology
- Science of Light
- Chemical Physics of Solids
- Physics of Complex Systems
- Physics
- Extraterrestrial Physics
- Nuclear Physics
- Molecular Physiology
- Plant Breeding Research
- Molecular Plant Physiology
- Plasma Physics
- Polymer Research
- Psychiatry
- Psycholinguistics
- Quantum Optics
- Radio Astronomy
- Security and Privacy
- Study of Societies
- Software Systems
- Solar System Research
- Solid State Research
- Sustainable Materials
research schools
- Otto Hahn (1948–1960)
- Adolf Butenandt (1960–1972)
- Reimar Lüst (1972–1984)
- Heinz Staab (1984–1990)
- Hans F. Zacher (1990–1996)
- Hubert Markl (1996–2002)
- Peter Gruss (2002–2014)
- Martin Stratmann (2014–2023)
- Patrick Cramer (since 2023)
- Walther Bothe (1954)
- Karl Ziegler (1963)
- Feodor Lynen (1964)
- Manfred Eigen (1967)
- Konrad Lorenz (1973)
- Georges J. F. Köhler (1984)
- Klaus von Klitzing (1985)
- Ernst Ruska (1986)
- Johann Deisenhofer (1988)
- Robert Huber (1988)
- Hartmut Michel (1988)
- Bert Sakmann (1991)
- Erwin Neher (1991)
- Paul J. Crutzen (1995)
- Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard (1995)
- Theodor W. Hänsch (2005)
- Gerhard Ertl (2007)
- Stefan W. Hell (2014)
- Emmanuelle Charpentier (2020)
- Reinhard Genzel (2020)
- Benjamin List (2021)
- Klaus Hasselmann (2021)
- Svante Pääbo (2022)
- Ferenc Krausz (2023)
- Kaiser Wilhelm Society
- Max Planck Digital Library
- Harnack Medal
- Schloss Ringberg
This German university, college or other education institution article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about a biology organization is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e