Symposium
Third Annual Global Symposium on NanoBioTechnology, New Directions in NanoHealth: Diagnostics, Therapies, Drug Delivery, Safety
CNSI Auditorium, UCLA

The Advanced Electron Microscopy in NanoMedicine Symposium

October 2 & 3, 2009 at the CNSI, UCLA
The symposium of cryo-electron microscopy will be very unique in that we are highlighting the latest technology developments that are key to nanomedicine applications. The program is open to students, faculty and industrial researchers in hopes that their expertise and enthusiasm will help develop these possible applications and further the ideas in nano related research.
Sound + Science Symposium
Location: UCLA California NanoSystems Institute Auditorium
STREAMING SYMPOSIUM LIVE! CLICK HERE
Buckminster Fuller - Starting with the Universe
Friday, September 12 - Saturday, September 13
The Great Hall of the Cooper Union
7 East 7th Street, at Astor Place
CNSI, UCLA – ASMeW, Waseda University, Tokyo
Joint Symposium on Nano-scale Research into Biosensors, Biomaterials, and Nanotoxicology
Location: The California NanoSystems Institute, UCLA
Sensors and Electronics - March 5th
Biomaterials and Medicine - March 6th
For information about speakers, agenda, and to RSVP please visit the website, http://www.cnsi.ucla.edu/conferences/nano-scale/.
Tesla: Visions + Inspirations
TESLA: VISIONS + INSPIRATIONS
a symposium at The California NanoSystems Institute (CNSI)
570 Westwood Plaza, Building 114

Nikola Tesla’s visions and inventions were at the core of the
SPACE ART TRACK at International Space Development Conference 2006
Co-Sponsored by the National Space Society and the Planetary Society
Sheraton Gateway Hotel at Los Angeles International Airport Los Angeles, California
Space Art colleagues from around the globe are invited to join us in Los Angeles for a Space Art Track that will be held as a part of the International Space Development Conference 2006 in the city of Los Angeles.
Thinking Atoms
UCLA ART | SCI CENTER PRESENTS: THINKING ATOMS
EDA

Science can prove that there are billions times a billion of atoms in a grain of sand and show that if we reduced our body to a solid mass of neutrons and protons it would result to a hundredth of a thickness of a human hair. Even there, string theories question this atomistic: view.
UCLA ART | SCI CENTER PRESENTS: GENETIC TECHNOLOGIES & ANIMALS
Can artists be trusted to act with integrity in the uncharted waters of their enthusiastic engagement with genetic technologies?
