558 search results for “amalia large millimeter sub millimeter area” in the Staff website
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Eva CornelisseFaculty of Humanities
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Helena HanhikangasFaculty of Humanities
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Marte BoonenFaculty of Humanities
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Mengdi ZhuFaculty of Humanities
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Ranwa AlamsiFaculty of Humanities
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Daniel LeeFaculty of Humanities
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Rhomayda AimahFaculty of Humanities
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Shirley AlexanderFaculty of Humanities
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Flora SmitFaculty of Humanities
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Chisato MakishimaFaculty of Humanities
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Xiaoqiang MengFaculty of Humanities
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Noboru YamashitaFaculty of Humanities
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Nazanin Tamari Senji LakFaculty of Humanities
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Irina RidzuanFaculty of Humanities
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Nainunis Aulia IzzaFaculty of Humanities
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Carmen KurpershoekFaculty of Humanities
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Joren PronkFaculty of Humanities
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Francesca RosatiFaculty of Humanities
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Xuan DongFaculty of Humanities
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Martine KropmanFaculty of Humanities
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Tianmu HongFaculty of Humanities
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David BinnsFaculty of Humanities
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Chelsey WongFaculty of Humanities
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Azzeddine KarratFaculty of Humanities
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Jolanda BosFaculty of Humanities
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Rahel PlassenFaculty of Humanities
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Said AmraniFaculty of Humanities
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Dilek SahinFaculty of Humanities
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Geoffrey CainFaculty of Humanities
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Milan IsmangilFaculty of Humanities
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Bamdad Aminzadehgoharrizi -
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Ercan Büyükçifçi -
Steven HagersFaculty of Humanities
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Flipping the classroom: ‘This course lays a foundation that students can build on for the rest of their studies’
The challenge: take three hundred students from vastly varying disciplines and teach them the basics of academic thinking in twelve lessons. Impossible? Professor Ben Arps and his team of tutors succeeded. It resulted in a large amount of positive student evaluations.
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DAG Lecture: A Semantic ETL Pipeline for Large-Scale Provenance Research
Lecture
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Threshold test: A purposeful and AI-proof testing method for large groups
LTA Lunch Lecture
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Niki van SteinFaculty of Science
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Genetics proves it: Indo-European did not come to Europe on horseback
Horses were first domesticated in South-West Russia, is the conclusion drawn by an international team of researchers writing in the well-respected journal Nature. Their conclusion resolves a longstanding archaeological question. But, surprisingly enough, this domestication did not contribute to the…
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Neanderthal prey: elephant teeth preserve 125,000-year-old record of movement and diet
Fossil teeth can preserve remarkable information, much like a biological identity card with data about the lives of individuals tens of thousands of years ago. By analyzing teeth, a new study published in Science Advances reconstructed the life history of four straight-tusked elephants (Palaeoloxodon…
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Damaged by Disgrace: report on involuntary relinquishment and adoption of babies in the Netherlands
For decades, unmarried girls and women in the Netherlands were forced to give up their newborn children. The impact was profound and persists to this day for the mothers, fathers, relinquished children, and the adoptive families in which they were raised.
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Two planets-in-formation discovered around young star WISPIT 2
In the disk surrounding the young star WISPIT 2, not one but two planets are taking shape. Leiden PhD candidate Richelle van Capelleveen played a key role in this discovery, providing a rare glimpse into the early stages of planetary system formation.
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Photo report: 'Ground-truthing' on the Veluwe
Dr Quentin Bourgeois and a group of students are currently exploring the Veluwe. In 2019 and 2020 volunteers looked at altitude maps of the Veluwe and indicated potential burial mound locations. Now the team from Leiden is 'ground-truthing', checking on the spot whether we are dealing with an actual…
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Tricking a quantum computer to enhance its performance
Researchers found a way to run programmes that should be impossible to carry out on an imperfect quantum computer. Such programmes are very computationally demanding and the quantum computers that currently exist are not yet up to that task. Unless you use a clever trick, Simon Marshall and Vedran Dunjko…