ERC Advanced Grant recipients announced
The European Research Council (ERC) has released details of the first
round of recipients of its Advanced Grants in the physical sciences and
engineering fields. Some 105 of the almost 1,000 applicants from these
disciplines have been allocated funding.
The ERC's Advanced Grants are aimed at experienced researchers with
a strong record in groundbreaking research, and the sole criterion on
which they are judged is scientific excellence. The ERC received a
total of 2,167 applications for its Advanced Grants; details of the
successful candidates in the life sciences, and social sciences and
humanities fields will be published in the coming months.
The physical sciences and engineering grant recipients will be
carrying out research in a diverse range of fields. Their host
institutions are located in 19 countries in the EU and the countries
which have signed up to the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7).
For example, Hubertus Fischer of the University of Bern in
Switzerland won funding for his MATRICs ('Modern approaches for
temperature reconstructions in polar ice cores') project. He plans to
develop new methods and techniques for analysing ice cores in greater
detail, with the ultimate goal of unravelling how the climate changed
in different regions of the world by analysing a single ice core.
Dr Fischer is also involved in the EU-funded EPICA ('European
project for ice coring in Antarctica') project, which this year won the
Descartes Prize for Transnational Collaborative Research at the
European Science Awards.
Another recipient is Professor Leo Kouwenhoven of Delft University
of Technology in the Netherlands. His project is on quantum
opto-electronics, and over the course of his five-year project, he
hopes to demonstrate the principle of the transfer of quantum
information from a single electron to a single photon.
Other subjects covered by the successful applicants include stellar
evolution; cleaner internal combustion engines; molecular motors;
particle accelerators with intense lasers; number theory; the
mathematical modelling of the cardiovascular system; and the dynamics
of volcanoes, to name just a few.
The ERC recently published its second call for proposals for its
Starting Grants, which are targeted at researchers in the early stages
of their career. The second call for proposals for the Advanced Grants
is due to be launched in November of this year.
Full list of successful candidates (pdf)
Source: Community R&D Information Service (CORDIS)
