The Institute of Physics in Halle is currently hosting a particularly sought-after scientist: Dr. Manuel Bibes. The French physicist is one of the world's leading researchers in the field of oxide interfaces. Together with his colleagues at Martin Luther University, he develops new ideas for joint research projects and combines local expertise with his own work.
Manuel Bibes' schedule is well filled: In the last days he had many meetings with different working groups of the Halle Institute of Physics. "I recently visited Wolf Widdra's laboratory and we talked about new experiments that we want to carry out together," said the researcher.
Manuel Bibes is Research Director at the renowned Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS) - Thales. There he heads the "Oxitronics" department. Prior to this, the physicist worked in the research group of the French physics Nobel Prize winner Prof. Dr. Albert Fert. His work has already received numerous awards, and the European Research Council is supporting him with an ERC Consolidator Grant. The fact that Bibes is currently on a research trip in Germany is due to an initiative of the physicist Prof. Dr. Ingrid Mertig from Halle. She had successfully nominated him for the Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. The prize money, 45,000 euros, is intended for several research stays in Germany.
Ingrid Mertig and Manuel Bibes both work in a special field of solid-state physics, the oxide interfaces. They've known each other for many years: When the Collaborative Research Centre (SFB) 762 "Functionality of Oxide Interfaces" was established in Halle in 2007, Bibes also began his work on this topic. The first meetings at workshops and conferences finally became joint scientific publications. "Halle's SFB on oxides is great. There is no comparable research funding in France," says Bibes. Ingrid Mertig is also enthusiastic about her guest: "Manuel Bibes is an expert on oxide interfaces in great demand worldwide. He is the ideal complement to our SFB."
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