Ewine van Dishoeck
Professor emeritus Molecular Astrophysics
- Name
- Prof.dr. E.F. van Dishoeck
- ewine@strw.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0001-7591-1907
Ewine van Dishoeck researches molecules in space. She has gained world fame with her pioneering work. Her current passion is the hunt for water and the water cycle in space. This will provide answers to questions such as: where does the water in our rivers come from? And: could there be life on other planets?
More information about Ewine van Dishoeck
PhD candidates
News
-
Professor Ewine van Dishoeck named Citation Laureate -
Is our water older than the sun? Astronomers find clue in ice around young star -
Lost sulfur in the universe found in salt on dust and pebbles -
Shocks in space: student Adriaan explores the universe around protostars -
Planet-forming discs around young low-mass star differs fundamentally from one around sun-like star -
What was there first? Water or planets? -
Tracking the origin and evolution of molecules in space -
Is there oxygen on exoplanets? New telescope finds out -
Leiden astronomers launch biggest space-ice database ever: ‘A kind of phone book, but for ice’ -
Ewine van Dishoeck receives the Niels Bohr medal -
Ewine van Dishoeck interviews minister Dijkgraaf - Astronomy celebrates 60 years of ESO -
Seeing Stars: Jupiter steals the show in cloudy night skies -
Lights out, stars on: Daan Roosegaarde on Seeing Stars Leiden -
New podcast about astronomy for the greater good -
Ewine van Dishoeck goes stargazing -
Mesmerising images from James Webb space telescope -
Planeetvormende schijven evolueren verrassend vergelijkbaar -
First MIRI-image by the James Webb Space Telescope -
Ewine van Dishoeck receives Fritz Zwicky prize for astrophysics & cosmology -
Astronomers discover largest molecule yet in a planet-forming disc -
Ewine van Dishoeck in children's book: 'Follow your heart and make sure you become very good at something' -
The launch of a new era: Leiden and the James Webb telescope (part II) -
The launch of a new era: Leiden and the James Webb telescope (Part I) -
A call about: the EuroScience Open Forum (ESOF) -
Ewine van Dishoeck after pontifical appointment: ‘Science and religion can coexist’ -
Leiden resident Ewine van Dishoeck wants to give something back to the city -
Leiden City of Science 2022: preparations are in full swing! -
Astronomer Danna Qasim wins two prizes for dissertation on methane ice -
Ewine van Dishoeck receives ERC Advanced Grant for research into the chemistry of new worlds -
ERC Advanced Grant for six Leiden researchers -
Long-awaited review reveals journey of water from interstellar clouds to habitable worlds -
BBC Science Focus names Ewine van Dishoeck as one of the six women who are changing chemistry -
Sculptures provide more diverse view of University’s history -
Ewine van Dishoeck receives the Jules Janssen Prize 2020 -
Leiden European City of Science in 2022 -
ESO instrument METIS passes important design milestone -
First time methane ice formed in Leiden under space conditions -
Faculty of Science starts new year with awards for talents -
‘We’re a spaceship with limited supplies’ -
Record number of Leiden students receive Young Talent Awards -
Searching for the origins of life in space with 8.9 million euros -
Ewine van Dishoeck receives honorary doctorate from the University of Geneva -
Celestial worlds and comet hysteria in Van Dishoeck exhibition -
Leiden Observatory comet research goes viral -
Ewine van Dishoeck awarded prestigious Schwarzschild Medal -
All comets in our solar system might come from the same place -
Ronald Stark and Amina Helmi join the management of NOVA -
Experience one hundred years of astronomy at the Old Observatory -
Van Engelshoven’s Letter to Parliament calls for more funding for science -
Cucurachi, Behrens and Matthee are teacher, discoverer, and PhD candidate of 2018 -
Quanta Magazine: where does Ewine van Dishoeck get her ideas? -
Exhibition celebrates a century of astronomical discoveries -
Broad media coverage for Kavli prize Ewine van Dishoeck -
Ewine van Dishoeck wins Kavli prize for astrophysics -
Ewine van Dishoeck in Board of Trustees Institute for Advanced Study -
Fourteen women professors take over the Senate Chamber -
Public Event International Day of Women & Girls in Science -
Come to the award ceremony of the World Cultural Council -
Freon-40 may not be a useful marker of life -
Astronomy at Dutch universities is worldleading -
Exploring the universe -
Cosmic recipe discovered for making glycerol -
Traces of building block of life found around infant suns -
First Stone Ceremony for ESO's Extremely Large Telescope -
Why fundamental science matters -
Solar telescope officially unveiled in Old Observatory -
Ewine van Dishoeck appointed Academy Professor -
Planet formation: food for thought -
New research centre for studying planet and star formation -
Ewine van Dishoeck shows us new worlds in Dies lecture
Former PhD candidates
-
Julia de Carvalho Santos -
Ardjan Sturm -
Lucas Stapper -
Teresa Paneque Carreño -
Andrés Izquierdo Cartagena -
Marina Gomes Rachid -
Lisa Wölfer -
Martijn van Gelder -
Lukasz Tychoniec -
Leon Trapman -
Paolo Cazzoletti -
Sierk van Terwisga -
Eva Bogelund -
Mason Carney -
Ko-Ju Chuang -
Christian Eistrup -
Anna Miotello -
Vachail Salinas Poblete -
Murillo Mejias -
Niels Frank Willem Ligterink -
Maria Drozdovskaya -
Nienke van der Marel -
Irene San José García -
Xiaohu Li -
Daniel Santoso Harsono -
Agata Karska -
Umut Yildiz -
Kuo-Song Wang -
Jeanette Elisabeth Bast -
Juan Rafael Martínez-Galarza -
Nikita Amiri -
Karl Johan Erik Torstensson -
Isabel Martins e Oliveira -
Demerese Marie Salter -
Ruud Visser -
Karin Ingegerd Oberg -
Dave Jacobus Petronella Lommen -
Tim Anton van Kempen -
Christian Brinch -
Vincent Carlo Geers -
Suzanne Elisabeth Bisschop -
Frederik Lahuis -
Karoliina Guss nee Isokoski -
Bastiaan Johan Jonkheid -
Fleur Antoinette van Broekhuizen -
Sergio Ioppolo
Ewine van Dishoeck helped develop the most powerful telescopes in the world. She conducts research into thin, ice-cold clouds of gas that are found between the stars close to our own solar system, including in the Orion Nebula, of which the Hubble telescope has made such breath-taking images. These gas clouds contain all sorts of molecules that are already interesting in themselves: due to the unusual conditions in space, molecules are present that are not present on earth, or only very rarely. But another fascinating thing also occurs in many of these gas clouds: new stars and planets are born. Van Dishoeck looks at the formation process of these celestial bodies, and studies which molecules in these clouds will end up on one of these new planets.
Van Dishoeck has been awarded many prizes and honours, including the Kavli Prize for astrophysics in 2018, the highest scientific award in this field worldwide. She also received the Spinoza Prize in 2000, which the highest academic award in the Netherlands. She has alsosecured numerous research grants. Van Dishoeck is also known for her work on the development of different telescopes. These are nearly always international collaboration projects in which Van Dishoeck assumes the role of bringing together people, resources and organisations.
Van Dishoeck conducts her research from the Leiden Observatory. With this observatory, Leiden University has one of the most illustrious institutes of astronomy in the world. Like Van Dishoeck, her colleagues astronomers Marijn Franx and Xander Tielens, have also been awarded the Spinoza Prize.
Professor emeritus Molecular Astrophysics
- Faculty of Science
- Leiden Observatory
- Leiden Observatory