Sir Harold Kroto, Nobel Laureate Chemistry 1996, Interview 2009
Competition and Motives: In this interview during the 59th Lindau Nobel Laureates Meeting in 2009 Sir Harold Kroto talks about competition within science, the consequences of winning a Nobel Prize and he criticises teachers and educational policy makers who oppose creationism hesitantly.
Riccardo Giacconi, Nobel Laureate in Physics 2002, Interview 2008
Riccardo Giacconi chats in the interview during the 58th Nobel Laureates Meeting at Lindau about how his thoughts about X-rays sitting at the foot of the Matterhorn a long time ago. He reportes on the successes of the Hubble Telescope and the Very Large Telescope and more.
Jennifer Murphy – young scientist in Lindau
A brief interview with one of the young scientist attending the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting – Jennifer Murphy from the University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Fenja Schoepke – young researcher at lnlm09
A brief interview with one of the young researchers attending the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting – Fenja Schoepke of RWTH Aachen, Germany
Ghada Al-Kadamany – young researcher at lnlm09
A brief interview with one of the young researchers attending the Lindau Nobel conference – Ghada Al-Kadamany from Jacobs University in Bremen, Germany
Anna-Maria Huber – young researcher at lnlm09
A brief interview with one of the young people attending the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting – Anna-Maria Huber from the Lindau high school
Erwin Neher, Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine 1991, Interview 2008
00:40 “Challenges” 03:54 Ideas 05:25 Solutions und Limitations 06:48 Unexpected Findings or Recognition by Chance 08:52 Open Questions: The Gigaseal 10:32 Current Work: Synaptic Plasticity In Coproduction with JoVe.com Sponsored by Mars.
Brian D. Josephson, Nobel Laureate in Physics 1973, Interview 2008
The theoretical physicist Brian D. Josephson votes for staying open minded in doing research. In the interview during the 58th Nobel Laureates Meeting at Lindau he says it is good to follow special target, but one should also be prepared to discover something quite different.
Theodor Hänsch, Nobel Laureate in Physics 2005, Interview 2008
00:24 The Nobel Prize in Physics 2005, 02:26 The Frequency Comb, 05:45 On Theory & Precision Experiments, 07:08 Stanford, 10:13 On Nobel Laureates, 10:55 Mentorship, in Coproduction with JoVE.com, sponsored by Mars
Roy Glauber, Nobel Laureate in Physics 2005, Interview 2008
00:25 Quantum Optics and the Nobel Prize in Physics 2005, 02:12 Bizarre Applications of Strange Phenomena, 04:00 The Los Alamos Project & Building the Bomb, 07:24 The Los Alamos Project & Robert Oppenheimer, 08:59 Styles of Feynman and Schwinger, 11:35 Becoming a Single Father, with JoVe.com, Sponsored by Mars
Jack Steinberger, Nobel Laureate in Physics 1988, Interview 2008
Fermi was the Greater Hero, 00:23 The Nobel Prize in Physics 1988, 01:01 Implications, 01:44 Mentors – Enrice Fermi and Robert Oppenheimer, 05:26 The Climate – A Global Challenge, 08:14 Alternative Energy Sources, 10:04 Possible Solutions sponsored by Mars
Peter Gruenberg, Nobel Laureate in Physics 2007, Interview 2008
Spintronics carry a high potential for findings in the near future which might change our everyday lifes, thinks Peter Gruenberg. In the interview during the 58th Nobel Laureates Meeting at Lindau he raves about the potential realization of spin-current – a sort of flowing magnetism.