Innovationsportal Sachsen-Anhalt

« Personen

portraitbild

Prof. Dr. Wolf Widdra

Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg

Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät II

Institut für Physik

Von-Danckelmann- Platz 3

06120

Halle (Saale)

Tel.:+49 345 5525361

Fax:+49 345 5527160

wolf.widdra@physik.uni-halle.de

Profil

Vita

• 10/82-03/88 Studying Physics at the Philipps-University Marburg, Germany
• 4/88 - 3/91 PhD at the Nuclear Surface Physics Institute, Physics Department, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany,
carried out at the Max-Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics, Heidelberg, Germany • 4/91 - 5/92 Postdoc at the Physics Department, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany
• 5/92 - 5/94 Postdoc at the Chemical Engineering Department, UC Santa Barbara, CA (with W. Henry Weinberg) on the
basis of a Feodor-Lynen fellowship from the Alexander-von-Humbold Foundation • 5/94-3/01 Assistant Professor at the Surface Science Institute, Prof. Dr. D. Menzel, Physics Department,
Technical University Munich, Germany • 4/01-3/03 Associate Professor (C3) of Experimental Physics, Technical University Berlin, Germany in combination with
Head of the Department "Synchrotron Radiation, Micro- and Nanostructures" at the Max-Born Institute for Nonlinear Optics and Short Pulse Spectroscopy, Berlin, Germany • since 4/03 Full Professur (C4) Experimental Physics, Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg,
Head of the Surface Science Department • 2009-2011 Dean of the Natural Science Faculty II - Chemistry, Mathematics, and Physics
• 7/10  Fellow of the Max-Planck Society (with working group at MPI for Microstructure Physics, Halle)

Expertenprofil

Experimentelle Oberflächenphysik
  • Struktur einkristalliner Metall-, Halbleiter- und Oxidoberflächen
  • Adsorption an Einkristalloberflächen
  • Elektronisches Struktur und Photoelektronenspektroskopie an Oberflächen
  • Schwingungseigenschaften von Oberflächen
  • Oxidische Grenzflächen

Forschergruppen • Projekte • Kooperationen

Forschergruppen

Projekte

Die Daten werden geladen ...

Kooperationen

  • Freie Universität Berlin
  • Max-Planck-Institut für Mikrostrukturphysik, Halle