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Michael Schmid

Researcher at Vienna University of Technology

Publications -  738
Citations -  34058

Michael Schmid is an academic researcher from Vienna University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Scanning tunneling microscope & Karyotype. The author has an hindex of 88, co-authored 715 publications receiving 30874 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Schmid include Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich & University of Zurich.

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Ordered array of single adatoms with remarkable thermal stability: Au/Fe3O4(001).

TL;DR: It is proposed that the strong site preference to be related to charge and orbital ordering within the first subsurface layer of Fe3O4(001)-(√2 × √2)R45° could prove an ideal model system for probing the chemical reactivity of single atomic species.
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Chromosome banding and DNA replication patterns in bird karyotypes

TL;DR: Results confirm that, in the ZZ male/ZW female sex-determining system of birds, dosage compensation for Z-linked genes does not occur by inactivation of one of the two Z chromosomes in the homogametic male.
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Potential Sputtering of Clean SiO 2 by Slow Highly Charged Ions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a sensitive quartz crystal microbalance technique to determine the sputter yields induced by ion-induced surface modification of insulators on LiF and SiO surfaces.
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Loss of telomeric sites in the chromosomes of Mus musculus domesticus (Rodentia:Muridae) during Robertsonian rearrangements.

TL;DR: The elimination of substantial amounts of chromosomal DNA during the formation of mouse Rb chromosomes is demonstrated, indicating that the breakpoints required for a Robertsonian process do not include telomeric sites exclusively but extend to the adjacent pericentromeric regions of the original acrocentric chromosomes.
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The chromosomes of terraranan frogs : insights into vertebrate cytogenetics

TL;DR: This monograph is the most comprehensive, original and comparative cytogenetic study of vertebrates ever performed, presenting results obtained over a 36-year period of more than 70 expeditions to the Neotropics and from several laboratories.