University of Göttingen awarded new Collaborative Research Centre

DFG funds ‘Mathematics of Experiment’ with approximately nine million euros

From 1 January 2021, the German Research Foundation (DFG) will fund a new Collaborative Research Centre (CRC) at the University of Göttingen: "Mathematics of Experiment: the challenge of indirect measurements in the natural sciences". Photo: CRC 1456

The German Research Foundation (DFG) will be funding a new Collaborative Research Centre (CRC) at the University of Göttingen to start 1 January 2021: Mathematics of Experiment: the challenge of indirect measurements in the natural sciences’. CRC 1456 comprises 16 scientific projects in which researchers from mathematics and natural sciences work together to analyse specific experimental data. The total funding amounts to around nine million euros over a period of four years. The CRC involves 27 researchers from the University of Göttingen in the Faculties of Mathematics and Computer Science, Physics, Chemistry, and the University Medical Centre, as well as the Max Planck Institutes for Biophysical Chemistry, and Solar System Research in Göttingen. In addition, a research group from the University of Jena is involved.

"In many areas of the natural sciences in recent decades, methods have been developed to measure huge amounts of data cheaply and efficiently," explains the lead of the CRC, Professor Thorsten Hohage from the Institute of Numerical and Applied Mathematics at the University of Göttingen. "The main challenge today is often to extract meaningful information from this data - modern measurement technologies often only provide information in an indirect way, and the observed data are very noisy."

The aim of the CRC is to contribute to the efficient extraction of the most quantitative information from experimental data based on mathematical modelling and analysis. Progress made in data science in recent years will be incorporated and combined with model-based approaches to develop techniques for analysing scientific data. Applications range from condensed matter physics, molecular or cellular biophysics, biomedical research to astronomy. Further information can be found at www.uni-goettingen.de/crc1456.

 

Contact:
Professor Thorsten Hohage
University of Göttingen
Institute of Numerical and Applied Mathematics
Tel: +49 (0) 39-24509
Email: hohage@math.uni-goettingen.de
http://ip.math.uni-goettingen.de/index.php?section=members&subsection=thohage&lang=en