Four faculty professors appointed to KNAW
The Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW: Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen) has appointed 28 new members, including five from the University of Groningen. Four of them are professor at the Faculty of Science and Engineering.
The Academy currently has over 200 regular members, all of whom are prominent academics working in all fields of academic research. Members are appointed on the basis of their academic achievements.
The KNAW advises the Dutch government on developments in the academic world, promotes national and international cooperation in academia, is actively involved in the quality assessment of academic research and is responsible for nineteen academic research institutes and for service provision to academia.
New members from the faculty:
Science Division
- Prof. Arnold Driessen (1958), professor of Molecular Biology, University of Groningen
- Prof. Theunis Piersma (1958), professor of Animal Ecology, University of Groningen, Wadden researcher, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ)
- Prof. Bert Poolman (1959), professor of Biochemistry, University of Groningen
- Prof. Bart van Wees (1961), professor of Technical Physics, University of Groningen
See also: KNAW website
Last modified: | 22 August 2024 1.36 p.m. |
More news
-
16 September 2025
The ocean absorbs carbon from the air, but what if the temperature increases?
‘Fortunately, seawater absorbs carbon dioxide (CO₂). If it didn’t, things would have been over and done with already,’ according to climate and ocean researchers Richard Bintanja and Rob Middag. But what actually happens to the ocean's carbon...
-
10 September 2025
Funding for Feringa and Minnaard from National Growth Fund project Big Chemistry
Two UG research projects have received funding from the National Growth Fund project Big Chemistry via NWO.
-
09 September 2025
The carbon cycle as Earth’s thermostat
Earth's natural carbon cycle becomes unbalanced if we, humans, continue to release extra carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere. In this overview article about the carbon cycle, you can find out how Earth generally keeps itself in balance and how...