THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION ANNOUNCES THE LEGAL FORMATION OF EMSO-ERIC

emso sites map1The European Commission announced today the legal formation of the European Multidisciplinary Seafloor and water-column Observatory European Research Infrastructure Consortium (EMSO-ERIC). The eight founding countries (France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, Romania, Spain, UK; head office in Rome) of the consortium lead the world in this level of ocean observing coordination. EMSO is a technologically advanced pan-European Research Infrastructure of fixed seafloor and water-column observatories (currently 11 deep and 4 shallow nodes around Europe) among wich the neutrino observatory KM3NET e and the cabled observatory installed near the hoarbour of Catania. It provides power, communications, sensors, and data infrastructure for continuous, high resolution, real-time, interactive ocean observations and supports a truly multi-and inter-disciplinary range of research areas including biology, geology, chemistry, physics, engineering, and computer science, from polar to tropical environments, down to the abyss. www.emso-eu.org

sito web EC: ec.europa.eu/research/infrastructures/index_en.cfm?pg=eric

You might also be interested in
Researchers collaborating on the development of quantum technologies at the SQMS Quantum Garage, one of the quantum research facilities developed by the Centre. ©Ryan Postel, Fermilab

Quantum computing: INFN and the US SQMS laboratory renew their collaboration

Chiara Maccani, dottoranda al CERN e all'Università di Padova, al lavoro sul rivelatore TWOCRYST nel tunnel dell'LHC ©Sune Jakobsen

Search for new physics: a possible new approach from bent crystals

Graphic reconstruction of a detail of the future underground infrastructure of the Einstein Telescope

Einstein Telescope: Lusatia officially enters the competition

The engineering model of the electrode housing developed for ESA's LISA space mission with Riccardo Freddi and Andrea Moroni (OHB Italia) and Carlo Zanoni (INFN-TIFPA), from right to left.

Detecting gravitational waves from space: first steps for the LISA mission

XIII edition of the International School of Science Communication and Journalism in Erice

ORIGINS. Exploring Science Communication and Journalism

Nobel Prize in Physics 2025 awarded to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis

Nobel Prize in Physics 2025: congratulations to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis