Open House Campus Garching October 3

Discover and try things out: We have invited you to experience research up close for a whole day.

Aerial view of the Garching research campus in 2021.

At the Garching research campus, visitors were invited to experience science in lectures, hands-on activities, guided tours and much more. Whether young or old, there were numerous activities for every one on this day: students, staff and external guests. In addition to TUM, many other research institutions such as the Max Planck and Fraunhofer Institutes took part in the day of action.

At a glance

Address and directions

  • Underground: Garching-Forschungszentrum
  • Bus: Ludwig-Prandtl-Str.; Boltzmannstr.; Garching-Forschungszentrum; Technische Universität; MVV timetable information
  • Car: A9, exit Garching-Nord

Program highlights

Program overview (in German)

Participating institutes

Around 25 research institutions took part in the open house. Here you can see a selection of our university’s participating institutes.

Contact

Do you have questions? Contact our organisation team:
tag-der-offenen-tuerspam prevention@tum.de

Further information

You can get an overview of the campus and the action day program on the Garching research campus website (in Geman).

"Open Day" lettering with graphic elements on a dark blue background

Germany-wide action day on October 3

Open House with the Mouse 2024

We also took part in the nationwide "Doors open with the Mouse" campaign day: some of our open house programs took place as part of the Mouse Door Opener Day.

More on the WDR action day

Further events on the topic of research

26 May 2025

Lecture and lab tour

MQV-Insights: How to connect ultracold qubits to the outside world

  • Monday, 5/26/2025
  • 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

Event location
Fraunhofer EMFT, Munich

Public event

Target audience
publically

How do you control the qubits of a superconducting quantum computer – which like it freezing cold at around -273 degrees Celsius – without disturbing these sensitive computing units? And how do you generate these freezing temperatures? All this and more, you can find out on 26 May 2025 at the Fraunhofer Institute for Electronic Microsystems and Solid State Technologies.

Register from 3/26/25

Due to limited capacity on site, we are unfortunately unable to offer a lab tour to all visitors to the lecture. We have therefore prepared registrations WITH and WITHOUT a lab tour.

Superconducting quantum computers are extremely cool - in the literal sense of the word: their computing units, the superconducting qubits, only reach their peak performance at frosty temperatures of around -273 degrees Celsius. The more of these qubits you put into a quantum computer, the more powerful it becomes. In this lecture, researchers from the Fraunhofer Institute for Electronic Microsystems and Solid State Technologies EMFT will provide exciting insights into research work in the millikelvin range. They will explain how a cryostat works and present one of their most promising developments: foil-based superconducting cables for controlling and reading qubits. This allows extremely high line densities to be realized, which is of crucial importance for the scaling of quantum computers and their future applications. Afterwards, there will be an opportunity to visit the cryo lab, which houses the cryostat used by the researchers to generate cold temperatures.

  • The lecture at the Fraunhofer EMFT begins at 5:30 pm and ends at around 6:15 pm.
  • The subsequent tour of the cryo lab ends at around 19:00.
How to find us
  • Location: Fraunhofer EMFT, Seminar room OG 2, Hansastraße 17d, 80686 Munich
Event overview
HSTS