News from the Göttingen Campus

Research team including agroecologists from Göttingen University study conditions in Peruvian cocoa agroforestry systems
Worldwide demand for food from the tropics that meets higher environmental and social standards has risen sharply in recent years. Consumers often have to make ethically questionable decisions: products may be available to the global market through child labour, starvation wages or environmental destruction. Building on an interdisciplinary project in Peru, an international research team with the participation of the University of Göttingen has…
Ethnographic Collection at Göttingen University returns two Māori Toi moko to Te Papa Tongarewa Museum New Zealand
In 1834, the University of Göttingen received, via the then reigning royal house of the United Kingdom, two Toi moko (preserved Māori tattooed heads) originally from New Zealand. These Toi Moko are now returning there: on Thursday 15 October 2020, the two Toi moko were handed over to the Māori and to the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa (known as Te Papa) during a ceremony at the University of Göttingen. The two Toi moko have been part of…
International research team including University of Göttingen explains advantages of molecular breeding methods
More than two billion people worldwide suffer from micronutrient malnutrition due to deficiencies in minerals and vitamins. Poor people in developing countries are most affected, as their diets are typically dominated by starchy staple foods, which are inexpensive sources of calories but contain low amounts of micronutrients. In a new Perspective article, an international team of scientists, involving the University of Göttingen, explains how…
Scientists from the University of Göttingen call for meaningful support for smallholder farmers in Indonesia
The growing global demand for palm oil has led to a rapid spread of oil palm monoculture plantations in South East Asia. This is often associated with the loss of natural habitat and biodiversity. Oil palm monocultures are uniformly structured and therefore offer little space for different species. Diversification using indigenous tree species can contribute to maintaining biodiversity. A research team from the University of Göttingen (Germany)…
On Thursday the space probe BepiColombo will fly past Venus. Measurements in the planet's magnetosphere are planned.
On its way to Mercury, the planet closest to the Sun, the European-Japanese space probe BepiColombo will change course again on Thursday, 15 October. Following the Earth flyby in April this year, the first of two Venus flybys is now imminent. It will take the spacecraft, which was launched into space two years ago, past our neighboring planet at a distance of 10720 kilometers. Some of the scientific instruments on board, to which the Max Planck…
Only in the course of several million years did the trans-Neptunian object Arrokothn acquire its bizarre, pancake-flat shape
The trans-Neptunian object Arrokoth, also known as Ultima Thule, which NASA’s space probe New Horizons passed on New Year's Day 2019, may have changed its shape significantly in the first 100 million years since its formation. In today's issue of the journal Nature Astronomy, researchers led by the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) suggest that the current shape of Arrokoth, which resembles a…
Die Corona-Pandemie bewältigen: Erstmals vernetzt die bundesdeutsche Universitätsmedizin ihre Forschungsressourcen. UMG koordiniert Verbundprojekt „B-FAST“ zu Test- und Überwachungsstrategien und Verbundprojekt „COMPASS“ zur Entwicklung einer Plattform für Pandemie-Apps mit und ist Partnerin in weiteren acht Verbundprojekten.
Die Corona-Pandemie stellt das Gesundheitssystem, die Entscheidungsträger*innen und die Bürger*innen vor neue und enorme Herausforderungen. Ziel ist es, das Wissen um bestmögliche Strategien zu erhöhen. Dafür haben sich alle 36 Universitätskliniken bundesweit zum nationalen Forschungsverbund „Netzwerk Universitätsmedizin“ (NUM) zusammengeschlossen. Ziel des Netzwerks Universitätsmedizin ist es, gemeinsam mit anderen Akteuren des…
Researchers at Göttingen University discover new disease affecting maize
Protecting crops against pests and diseases is essential to ensure a secure food supply. Around 95 percent of food comes from conventional agriculture, which uses chemical pesticides to keep crops healthy. Increasingly, however, organic pesticides are also being sought as an alternative. Some organic pesticides contain live spores of the fungus Trichoderma, which have the ability to suppress other pathogens. Researchers at the University of…
When you get a cup of hot coffee and a glass of cold beer, what should you drink first? Does the coffee get cooler faster than the beer warms up? Based on our everyday experience, one would expect that the answer depends only on how much the temperature of the two drinks differs from their ambient temperature. If the difference is the same, both processes should occur at the same rate. This does not apply on the nanoscale though: Small systems warm up faster than they cool down. The Göttingen Max Planck researchers Aljaz Godec and Allesio Lapolla have now mathematically proven this.
When thermodynamic equilibrium is restored after a rapid change in temperature – in this example, the temperature of beer or coffee – the so-called free energy is the driving force. It is composed of two driving forces that work against each other: entropy and potential energy. “When we tap a cold beer, its ambient temperature changes because it is much cooler in the barrel,” explains Lapolla, a PhD student in Godec's research group at the Max…
Agroecologists from Göttingen University compare pesticides, fertilisers, manual pollination and farming costs in Indonesia
Cocoa is in great demand on the world market, but there are many different ways to increase production. A research team from the University of Göttingen has now investigated the relative importance of the use of pesticides, fertilisers and manual pollination in a well replicated field trial in Indonesian agroforestry systems. The result: an increase in both cocoa yield and farming income was achieved – not by agrochemicals, but by manual…