Zaměstnanci

Jméno Roeselová Martina
Pozice Vědecký pracovník
Martina Roeselová

Martina Roeselová

Scientist


Laboratory of Pavel Jungwirth
Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry ASCR, v.v.i.
Flemingovo nám. 2, CZ-166 10 Prague 6, Czech Republic

Phone: (+420) 220 410 314
Fax: (+420) 224 410 320

 
Education
1989 M.Sc. in chemical physics and biophysics, Charles University, Prague.
2003 Ph.D. in computational chemistry. Charles University and J. Heyrovský Institute of Physical Chemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (advisor Prof. P. Jungwirth).
 
Experience
2003-2004 Postdoctoral Researcher, University of California, Irvine (with Prof. B. J. Finlayson Pitts and Prof. D. Tobias), NATO Science Fellowship.
1992-2003 Researcher, J.Heyrovský Institute of Physical Chemistry AS CR, Prague.
1989-1992 Research and teaching assistant, Department of Polymer Physics, Charles University, Prague.
1994 Visiting researcher, University of Fribourg, Switzerland (with Prof. T. Bally).
1999, 2000 Visiting researcher, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany (with Dr. B. Schmidt).
2002 Visiting researcher, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel (with Prof. R. B. Gerber).
2005, 2009 Visiting researcher, University of California, Irvine.
 
Appointments
  • International collaborator of the AirUCI Environmental Molecular Science Institute, University of California, Irvine (http://www.chem.uci.edu/airuci).
  • Member of the implementation group for the HitT: Halogens in the Troposphere SOLAS/IGAC task (http://www.hitt-task.net).
  • Member, Czech Aerosol Society.
 
Teaching
since 2007 Advanced course "Molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations", Charles University, Prague.
2006 Summer courses "Molecular simulations for atmospherically relevant systems", A.I. Cuza University, Iasi, Roumania.
2008 ECONET Summer School, Constanza, Roumania.
2009, 2010 Project leader of "Schola Ludus", Academic and University Center Nové Hrady.
 
Research interest
Molecular simulations of aqueous and soft organic interfaces, in particular those of atmospheric and environmental relevance. The aim is to gain molecular-level understanding of the fundamental interactions governing the physics and chemistry of interfacial processes, which is critical for a more comprehensive assessment of their effects on air and water quality, global climate, ecosystems and public health.