太客气了。其实我对你所说的研究方向不太了解。帮你查了一下。下面是Harvard University 的 Biophysics Program 的简介,你参考一下:
Description and Philosophy:
Initiated in 1959 by Arthur K. Solomon, the Committee on Higher Degrees in Biophysics at Harvard University has a long history of important research achievements. Over 60 faculty members from departments including Physics, Chemistry & Chemical Biology, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Engineering Sciences, the Division of Applied Sciences, the Division of Medical Sciences (Genetics, Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Cell Biology, Neurobiology and the Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology), the teaching Hospitals (Childrens' Hospital, Beth Israel Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital), and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute participate in the training of students in the Biophysics Program.
The program is designed to nurture independent, creative scientists. Applicants for graduate training should have sound preliminary training in the physical sciences, especially chemistry, physics, and mathematics. The primary objective of the program is to educate and train individuals with this background to apply the concepts and methods of the physical sciences to the solution of biological problems. Owing to the interdepartmental nature of the program, a student's research options are increased greatly. Research programs may be pursued in any of the departments or hospitals mentioned previously.
Suggested Undergraduate Preparation for Application:
Mathematics :
MathematicsMultivariable Calculus/Linear Algebra and Differential Equations (Math 21a & 21b)
Advanced Calculus, Real Analysis (Math 112)
Complex Analysis (Math 113)
Structure and Organization of Programming (Computer Science 50)
Linear Algebra (Math 121)
Physics:
Classical Mechanics (Physics 15a)
Electromagnetism and Relativity (Physics 15b)
Wave Phenomena (Physics 15c)
Introductory Quantum Mechanics I (Physics 143a)
Laboratory Electronics (Physics 123)
Elementary Statistical Mechanics and Thermodynamics (Physics 181)
For 35 years, the Biophysics Research Division has been the center for University of Michigan researchers interested in applying ideas, concepts, and techniques from the physical sciences to problems in molecular and cell biology. Because of its strong interdisciplinary focus and strong ties throughout the University community, the division is a natural meeting ground for people interested in interactions that transcend the traditional boundaries between disciplines. It is also a place for graduate students and post-docs to learn the skills necessary for future careers in a world that increasingly values interdisciplinary and integrative perspectives.
The Biophysics Research Division consists of eleven core faculty members with laboratories in the Chemistry building, all with joint appointments in other academic departments such as Chemistry, Physics, Biology, and Biological Chemistry, in addition to twenty-four associated faculty with appointments throughout the University. Students in Biophysics have opportunities to perform cutting-edge research in an extremely wide range of areas including structural biology, computational biology and biophysics, bioinformatics, membrane biophysics, spectroscopy and its applications, and enzyme kinetics.
The Structural Biologists use X-ray crystallography, multi-dimensional NMR and other spectroscopies, computational approaches, and other techniques from molecular biology to understand the function, structure, dynamics, and energetics of important biological macromolecules. The scientists working in Spectroscopy and Microscopy are developing new physical methods to study quantitative aspects of biological systems, from molecules to cells. The Computational Biophysicists at Michigan are at the forefront of developments of theoretical approaches in protein folding, evolution and bioinformatics. Our Biophysical Chemists integrate many of the above methods to further the understanding of enzyme mechanisms, protein folding and intermolecular interactions, often in a biomedical context