Team:TU-Delft/Timon

From 2013.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
 
(6 intermediate revisions not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
-
[[Media:Example.ogg]]{{:Team:TU-Delft/Templates/Navigation}}
+
{{:Team:TU-Delft/Templates/Navigation}}
{{:Team:TU-Delft/Templates/Style}}
{{:Team:TU-Delft/Templates/Style}}
{{:Team:TU-Delft/Templates/Frog}}
{{:Team:TU-Delft/Templates/Frog}}
Line 8: Line 8:
<div style="margin-left:30px;margin-right:30px; width:900px;float:left;">   
<div style="margin-left:30px;margin-right:30px; width:900px;float:left;">   
<h2 align="center">Timon Idema</h2>
<h2 align="center">Timon Idema</h2>
 +
[[File:Idema_thumb.png‎|left|frame|Timon]]
-
<html>
 
-
 
+
<p align="justify">
-
<table border="1" cellspacing="7" cellpadding="0">
+
In September 2012, I joined the Department of Bionanoscience (BN) at the TU Delft as an assistant professor. My group uses theoretical methods to model systems that exhibit collective dynamics, on a wide range of scales, all the way from molecules to organisms. An important reason for me as a theorist to come work at the predominantly experimental BN department was the opportunity to collaborate directly with experimentalists, interacting with them on a daily basis. The same is true for iGEM, where the project can only be successful if experimentalists and modelers work together. Given my background I am mostly involved in the modeling side of the iGEM project, but as an advisor, not an instructor. Its really the student's project, which is the other reason why I think iGEM is something great!
-
<tr><td><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/3/3c/Idema.png" width="170" height="204" border="0" alt="picture"></td></tr>
+
</p>
-
</table>
+
-
</html>
+

Latest revision as of 09:47, 30 September 2013


Timon Idema

Timon


In September 2012, I joined the Department of Bionanoscience (BN) at the TU Delft as an assistant professor. My group uses theoretical methods to model systems that exhibit collective dynamics, on a wide range of scales, all the way from molecules to organisms. An important reason for me as a theorist to come work at the predominantly experimental BN department was the opportunity to collaborate directly with experimentalists, interacting with them on a daily basis. The same is true for iGEM, where the project can only be successful if experimentalists and modelers work together. Given my background I am mostly involved in the modeling side of the iGEM project, but as an advisor, not an instructor. Its really the student's project, which is the other reason why I think iGEM is something great!