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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
May
U. of I. alumni research scholar
Martin Gruebele receives Bessel Prize
Sarah Scalia,
News Bureau
217-333-1085; scalia@uiuc.edu
5/2/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Martin Gruebele, a professor of chemistry
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, has received a Wilhelm
Friedrich Bessel Research Prize Award from the Alexander von Humboldt
Foundation in Bonn, Germany.
Each year the foundation grants approximately 20 research awards to
young scientists and scholars from abroad who already are recognized
as outstanding researchers in their fields. The award winners are invited
to work on research projects of their choice in cooperation with colleagues
in Germany for a period of six months to one year. The award also includes
a cash prize of 50,000 Euros (about $65,000 at current exchange rates).
Gruebele is conducting research with Martina Havenith and her research
group at Ruhr-Universität Bochum in central Germany. This fall
he will travel to Germany to study the motions of proteins while they
are folding into their characteristic shapes, as well as the motions
of water molecules surrounding proteins during the folding process.
In order to study these motions, Gruebele uses long-wavelength lasers
that produce “far infrared” light.
Gruebele received his bachelor’s degree in 1984 and his doctorate
in 1988 from the University of California at Berkeley. He was a postdoctoral
fellow at the California Institute of Technology before joining the
faculty at Illinois in 1992. He serves as an Alumni Research Scholar
in the department of chemistry, a researcher at the Beckman
Institute and is the director of the U. of I.’s Center
for Biophysics and Computational Biology.
Gruebele also has been honored with a Packard Fellowship, the Coblentz
Award of the Coblentz Society, a Cottrell Scholarship from the Research
Corporation, a Sloan Foundation fellowship, the Teacher-Scholar Award
of the Dreyfus Foundation, and a Young Investigator Award from the National
Science Foundation. He is a University Scholar and a fellow of the American
Physical Society.
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