Professor Jene Golovchenko Harvard University
Professor Golovchenko is Rumsford Professor of Physics and Gordon McKay
Professor of Applied Physics at Harvard University. His broad research
career has encompassed research posts at Harvard University, Aarhus
University in Denmark, in industry, at Bell Labs, in national
laboratories at Brookhaven and Livermore and at CERN in Geneva,
Switzerland. He is also a member of the Rowland Institute for Science,
an interdisciplinary non-profit basic research institute in Cambridge.
The Harvard Nanopore Group
The
Harvard Nanopore Group is led by Professor Daniel Branton and Professor
Jene Golovchenko. The group has been investigating electronic methods
for very rapidly detecting, characterising and sequencing single
molecules of DNA. A detector consisting of a single nanopore in a thin,
insulating, solid-state membrane could mimic the function of alpha
hemolysin pores in lipid bilayers, while serving as a platform for
integrated electronic detection devices. The group’s research has lead
to the development of a new ion beam based method for creating
nanoscale structures in semiconductors called "ion beam sculpting".
The
Group is also developing other applications that may utilize the
sensitivity and speed of nanopore probing, and is investigating the
physics of DNA polymer movement through the confined space of a
nanopore, coordinating the application of material science tools to
fabricate solid-state nanopores, and developing the associated
biochemistry, molecular biology, electronics, and signal processing to
effect molecular recognition.
http://www.mcb.harvard.edu/branton/Professor
Golovchenko specializes in studying the fundamental interactions of
radiation and matter and the application of this knowledge to revealing
and controlling the properties of materials.