Professor Christiane Timmel
Winner: 2020 Tilden Prize
University of Oxford
For seminal contributions to the fields of spin chemistry and electron paramagnetic resonance.
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I have never published a paper as a sole author. I would not wish it any other way. For me science, like life, is best if you struggle to get there as a team.
Professor Timmel investigates spin-polarised radical pairs and their magnetic sensitivity. In this field of Spin Chemistry, her main focus has been centred on the study of the radical pair mechanism, speculated to lie at the heart of avian (night migratory) magnetoreception.
Fascinatingly, the formation of pairs of radicals inside the blue-light sensitive protein, cryptochrome, located in the bird’s retina is thought to lie at the heart of the phenomenon of magnetoreception. Using optical spectroscopy, Professor Timmel and her team have been able to show that the application of weak magnetic fields can indeed affect the yield of the reactions between light induced radicals inside cryptochrome proteins. Moreover, they have demonstrated the first so-called chemical compass which allows the determination of a magnetic field direction read out via the yield of a chemical reaction.
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