Institute for Theoretical Physics (ITP)

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memberpages:gieseke [2020/03/04 17:05] – [PD Dr. Stefan Gieseke] giesekememberpages:gieseke [2023/06/19 11:37] (current) – Updated HTML code after wiki upgrade cbors
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 ====== PD Dr. Stefan Gieseke ====== ====== PD Dr. Stefan Gieseke ======
 //Institute for Theoretical Physics// \\ //Institute for Theoretical Physics// \\
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 E-mail: [[stefan.gieseke@kit.edu]] \\ E-mail: [[stefan.gieseke@kit.edu]] \\
 Homepage: [[https://www.itp.kit.edu/~gieseke/|Link]] \\ Homepage: [[https://www.itp.kit.edu/~gieseke/|Link]] \\
-**Office hours:** Generally whenever my office door is open - Sprechstunde on Monday 15:00-16:00h - or send me an email for an appointment+**Office hours:** Please send an email for an appointment 
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 ===== About Me ===== ===== About Me =====
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 I have studied physics at the University of Bremen, where I also received my Diploma in 1998, working on Monte Carlo simulations of Heavy Ion Collisions.  I moved into Elementary Particle Physics at the University of Hamburg/DESY, where I studied perturbative Quantum Chromodynamics in the High Energy limit.  After I received my PhD in 2001, I moved to the University of Cambridge where I began working on the rewrite of the Monte Carlo event generator Herwig from the very beginning.  This remained my main research topic also when I moved to the University of Karlsruhe in 2004, where I later headed a Young Investigator Group on Monte Carlo Development and where I am now, after a year at CERN in 2007, a permanent staff member at the KIT. I have studied physics at the University of Bremen, where I also received my Diploma in 1998, working on Monte Carlo simulations of Heavy Ion Collisions.  I moved into Elementary Particle Physics at the University of Hamburg/DESY, where I studied perturbative Quantum Chromodynamics in the High Energy limit.  After I received my PhD in 2001, I moved to the University of Cambridge where I began working on the rewrite of the Monte Carlo event generator Herwig from the very beginning.  This remained my main research topic also when I moved to the University of Karlsruhe in 2004, where I later headed a Young Investigator Group on Monte Carlo Development and where I am now, after a year at CERN in 2007, a permanent staff member at the KIT.
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