Before the current crisis, a mini-school for budding physicists was planned and organized by scientists at the Technical University of Munich and MGML, Charles University - a cooperation project funded by the Bayerisch-Tschechischen Hochschulagentur. But as it has turned out, Corona forced the event to be held in a virtual format.
The silver lining is that this format has allowed a larger number of people from around the world to participate. The aim of this Czech-Bavarian mini-school, held from the 18th to the 22nd of October, was to introduce the junior researchers to the large-scale facilities ELI (Extreme Light Infrastructure) beamlines, the Charles University, and Heinz Maier-Leibnitz Zentrum.
Through these introductions, participants could gain valuable insights into these laboratories as well as opportunities for networking and socialisation. As is the case with so many things during this time, the Covid19-pandemic prevented the event from taking place in its originally planned form.
But since it remains paramount to keep the education and promotion of the next-generation scientists alive despite the ongoing crises, it was important to the organizers that the first Czech-Bavarian mini-school on large scale facilities and open data will not be cancelled. Therefore, they entirely overhauled the concept of the mini-school in order to covert it into an online format.
An online event does have a few clear advantages - instead of the original 20 participants from Munich and Prague, close to 100 scientists from 20 different countries registered for the various different lecture series. In spite of the restrictions imposed by the current conditions, the highlights of the mini-school were the guided tours through the different large-scale facilities.
The ELI beamlines near Prague, reconstructed their laboratories virtually, allowing for a complete online tour to take place. Similarly, Dr.
Johanna K. Jochum organized a tour which led the students through the FRM II using a webcam.
In addition, the students received a detailed look through the Materials Growth & Measurement Laboratory from Dr. Petr Čermák.
Hands-on data evaluation Besides guided tours and lectures, the students from Prague and Munich were able to demonstrate their presentation skills and give a short introduction to their research topics during the student flash talk competition. The participants delivered impressively clear and creative talks, even under the pressure of strict time constraints.
During the last day of the mini-school, the participants were apprised of an important current trend in the documentation of scientific research: Open Data based on the "FAIR" principles of "findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability" of data for the good of the entire scientific community. After an extensive introduction to the topic and several open data tools, the participants were given a chance to immediately apply these tools to a dataset made available by the Institut Laue-Langevin.
Original article was published on the MLZ webpage.