• Michael Doser

    Michael Doser
    “If apples fall down, do anti-apples fall up?”

    Michael Doser

    Watch the video of Michael Doser’s 2010 talk here.

    Watch the video of Michael Doser’s 2009 talk here.

    2010: “The Return Of Antimatter”
    2009: “If Apples Fall Down, Do Anti-Apples Fall Up?”

    michael_doser

    Michael Doser is a particle physicist working at CERN. He has been working with antimatter since 1983, using it both as a tool and as an object of study, with the goal of understanding the first moments of the Universe. In 2002, he was part of the team that made cold atoms of antihydrogen for the first time, and – after bringing together its international and interdisciplinary team – currently leads the AEGIS experiment that will measure how antimatter falls.

    More about Michael Doser at aegis.web.cern.ch and cern.ch

    Have a question for Michael Doser? Ask it in the comments below.

    Robert Klapisch

    Robert Klapisch

    Robert Klapisch (PhD), a French physicist, was Director of Research at CERN (1981-1987) and adviser to the Director General Carlo Rubbia, in charge of Communication Policy (1989 to 1993). He co-authored with Rubbia the proposal for the Energy Amplifier (a.k.a. “Rubbiatron”) a new approach at nuclear energy (1993-1997).

    As President of the French Association for the Advancement of Science (2000 to 2003), he advocated a North-South Scientific Dialogue as a privileged means to avoid the infamous “Clash of Civilisations”. This led him to set up in 2006 a dedicated “Sharing Knowledge Foundation” which he chairs. Fighting against the Digital Divide is one of the principal goals of the Foundation.

    President Sarkozy promoted him Officier de la Legion d’Honneur in 2007.

    More about Robert Klapisch at partager-le-savoir.org

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