Increasingly,
scientists working in the field began to express unease.
Not exact matches
«Synthetic biology is a new area that's really exciting to young
scientists — to have things
begin to
work in this way is a sort of validation of the
field,» says Pamela Silver, a professor of systems biology at Harvard University Medical School and co-author of a study demonstrating one of the first synthetic restructurings of a eukaryotic cell that is described
in the journal Genes & Development.
My interest
in research development
began during my undergraduate studies when I received the opportunity to participate
in a city - funded project, but
working as a postdoctoral research
scientist at Karolinska Institutet
in Stockholm, Sweden is ultimately what led me to the
field.
Scientists first
began widely using laser frequency combs as precision rulers
in the late 1990s
in fields like metrology and spectroscopy; for their
work, the technology's developers (John L. Hall of JILA and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Theodor Hänsch of the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics and Ludwig Maximilians University Munich) were awarded half of the Nobel Prize
in Physics
in 2005.