Team:Brown/Team/About

From 2008.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{BrownTemp}}
{{BrownTemp}}
[[Image:Team conduct together.jpg|200px|right|frame|Team Conductance going crazy ]]
[[Image:Team conduct together.jpg|200px|right|frame|Team Conductance going crazy ]]
 +
[[Image:Igem-logo-08.jpg|300px x 300px|left|frame|iGEM 2008]]
The '''Brown iGEM Lab''' is ''student-run'' and consists of five undergraduates. This year, the team split up to work on two projects. We begin our training in the Spring semester with a lab class in Synthetic Biology.  With the gracious support of the UTRA Program and various departments, we work throughout the summer on our projects.  With the guidance of graduate mentors and faculty advisers across a multitude of departments, our lab is currently working on two such ventures--one a novel electrical reporting system and the other a novel threshold switch. In the spirit of Synthetic Biology, our team's project incorporates aspects of electrical engineering, electrochemistry, genetics, and microbiology.
The '''Brown iGEM Lab''' is ''student-run'' and consists of five undergraduates. This year, the team split up to work on two projects. We begin our training in the Spring semester with a lab class in Synthetic Biology.  With the gracious support of the UTRA Program and various departments, we work throughout the summer on our projects.  With the guidance of graduate mentors and faculty advisers across a multitude of departments, our lab is currently working on two such ventures--one a novel electrical reporting system and the other a novel threshold switch. In the spirit of Synthetic Biology, our team's project incorporates aspects of electrical engineering, electrochemistry, genetics, and microbiology.
-
[[Image:Igemlego.jpg|300px x 300px|left|frame|iGEM 2008]]
 

Latest revision as of 03:31, 30 October 2008



Team Conductance going crazy
iGEM 2008

The Brown iGEM Lab is student-run and consists of five undergraduates. This year, the team split up to work on two projects. We begin our training in the Spring semester with a lab class in Synthetic Biology. With the gracious support of the UTRA Program and various departments, we work throughout the summer on our projects. With the guidance of graduate mentors and faculty advisers across a multitude of departments, our lab is currently working on two such ventures--one a novel electrical reporting system and the other a novel threshold switch. In the spirit of Synthetic Biology, our team's project incorporates aspects of electrical engineering, electrochemistry, genetics, and microbiology.