Introducing the new columnists
In the coming months four authors will write about what moves and inspires them – from satellite launches to life on campus in Singapore. Meet the new columnists here.
Ulrike Kastrup will start off the column series in the coming week. Ulrike has been Director of focusTerra, ETH Zurich’s Earth Science Research and Information Centre, for five years. She studied geology at the University of Bonn and the University of Zurich and completed her doctorate at the Swiss Seismological Service in the Institute of Geophysics at ETH Zurich. She then went on to carry out research and work on risk management and risk communication in relation to natural hazards at various organisations and institutions, including the United Nations University in Bonn, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australia and as a Corporate Risk Manager at SBB (Swiss Federal Railways). By organising numerous exhibitions and activities at focusTerra, Ulrike Kastrup and her team are keen to open the public’s eyes to the beauty and fascinating qualities of geology as well as its role in everyday life.
The new VSETH President
In November 2013, Julia Wysling was elected President of VSETH by the Council of Members, the highest body in the Student Association VSETH. She was born in Zurich in 1990 and grew up in Zurich, Vienna and most recently in Uster. Having successfully completed her studies at the Kantonsschule R?mibühl, which included an exchange year in Australia, she has been studying mathematics at ETH Zurich since 2009. Julia had previously already played an active part in the Mathematicians’ and Physicists’ Association (VMP), in various VSETH committees and in the SoNaFe/WiNaFe Association, which organises the summer and winter end-of-semester parties at ETH Zurich. One aspect of her work in VSETH, which she finds particularly fascinating, is how the students’ political representation influences the range of services on offer. In her free time, Julia spends her time training for a triathlon.
WPF President
Ursula Keller will also participate as a columnist. The physics professor, born 1959 in Zug, has been at ETH since 1993, and director of the NCCR MUST since 2010. She obtained her Masters at ETH Zurich in 1984, and her Ph.D. at Stanford University in 1989, and before returning to ETH she worked as an independent researcher at AT&T Bell Laboratories. Her current research group explores ultrafast science and laser technology, using this competitive know-how to understand and control fundamental charge and energy transport with atomic spatial and attosecond temporal resolution. Ursula has received several international prizes, as well as aEuropean Research Council (ERC) AdvanceGrant. She currently serves as the president of the ETH Women Professors Forum (WPF).
A view from Singapore
Marta Heisel-Wisniewska will report from the Singapore ETH Center. She is currently working as a researcher at the Chair of Architecture and Construction at the Future Cities Laboratory in Singapore, a collaboration of the ETH Zurich and the National Research Foundation Singapore. Marta received her education at West Pomeranian University of Technology ZUT Szczecin in Poland, as well as at the University of the Arts Berlin between 2004 and 2011. Prior to her engagement at FCL Singapore, she was working as a lecturer and architectural program coordinator at the Ethiopian Institute of Architecture, Building Construction and City Development in Addis Ababa. She was part of a research team on refugee shelter design and a coordinator of a consultancy project for Addis Ababa Institute of Technology AAiT. In 2011, EiABC Student Council recognized her commitment with a ‘Best Teaching’ award.