Daniel Badali |
Source/Credit: University of Toronto
By UofT / Daniel Badali | July 27, 2011
The Department would like to congratulate the winner of the first Abdus Salam Award, Daniel Badali! The award is for the best research project done by a UofT Physics undergraduate student and supervised by a UofT Physics faculty member.
Working with Professor Claudiu Gradinaru introduced me to both the experimental and theoretical aspects of single-molecule biophysics. I studied the binding kinetics between a new drug which targets the cancerous protein STAT3, and this work was recently accepted for publication in Angewandte Chemie Int. Ed. I then performed an in-depth study of how the random motion of molecules affects their ability to transfer energy between them; this work has significant applications to FRET, a common technique used to measure small distances between biomolecules.
I am currently in Hamburg working with Professor Dwayne Miller where I will be continuing my PhD studies. My research involves using ultrafast low energy electrons to study structural dynamics of surfaces through diffraction. I am building the world's first time-resolved transmission LEED machine, and I am happy to report that it is working; we have electrons flying!
Daniel Badali
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