In their natural environment, all insects, including pests of our crops, have natural antagonists. We make use of this for biological pest control in our greenhouse and largely dispense with insecticides.
Humans and animals have tiny roommates: microbes. Compare the microbes that live on different humans with those found on and in insects. Discover real symbionts among them, which are the focus of our research.
Immerse yourself in the world of diversity that is barely visible or invisible to the naked eye! Dyes make symbionts visible under the microscope and insects from large to tiny can be seen in a completely different light under the stereomicroscope.
Ants are social insects that live in colonies of between a dozen individuals and millions of workers. Discover the tiny world and the variety of shapes, forms and diets of these fascinating insects!
Did you know that insects can smell? Discover how they do this and how we research them. We breed butterflies, grasshoppers and flies and explore their sense of smell. Test your own nose in fun competitions.
Many living creatures use scents to communicate with each other. Although the human nose cannot detect many of these substances, we are still able to detect and analyze them using state-of-the-art technology.
Deep in the Amazon rainforest stands a measuring tower as tall as the Eiffel Tower. In our foyer you can climb a model of the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory and learn more about the research project in an exhibition by scientists.
Heating with black surfaces or black films that glow under the microscope like New York at night - is that possible? Various experiments reveal the absorption properties of the black layers produced at Leibniz IPHT.
Time
18:00 - 24:00 o'clock
Organizer
Leibniz-Institut für Photonische Technologien e.V.