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Brockhouse was born in Lethbridge, Alberta, and was a graduate of the University of British Columbia (BA, 1947) and the University of Toronto (MA, 1948; Ph.D, 1950). | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Goldblum was the spokesperson of Peace Now from 1980 to 2000. He was in the front line of the demonstration when Peace Now protester Emil Grunzweig was murdered. He later identified the incident as a "catalyst" for greater political activism. Goldblum initiated the Settlements Watch activities of Peace Now in 1990. In ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Siegbahn was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1924. He won the Hughes Medal 1934 and Rumford Medal 1940. In 1944, he patented the Siegbahn pump. Siegbahn was elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society in 1954.
There is a street, Route Siegbahn, named after Siegbahn at CERN, on the Prévessin site in France. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Robert Dirks (May 29, 1978 – February 3, 2015) was an American chemist known for his theoretical and experimental work in DNA nanotechnology. Born in Thailand to a Thai Chinese mother and American father, he moved to Spokane, Washington at a young age. Dirks was the first graduate student in Niles Pierce's research gro... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Coveney has co-authored three popular science books with his long term friend and collaborator, Roger Highfield:
*The Arrow of Time (1991)
*Frontiers of Complexity (1996)
*Virtual You (2023) | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Kevin K. Lehmann (born September 7, 1955, in Newark, New Jersey) is an American chemist and spectroscopist at the University of Virginia, best known for his work in the area of intramolecular and collisional dynamics, and for his advances in the method of cavity ring down spectroscopy (CRDS).
Raised in Irvington, New J... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Mark received a B.S. degree in chemistry from Williams College (1979) and a Ph.D. degree in physical chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley (1983). He spent the next four years as a postdoctoral researcher at two institutions, Oregon State University (1984–1985) with Prof. Joseph W. Nibler and the Unive... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Wang obtained a B.S. degree in chemistry from Wuhan University in 1982, and a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1990. He completed his postdoctoral stay at Rice University before moving to Richland, WA in 1993 to accept a joint position between Washington State University and Pacific Nor... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Fraunhofer also developed a diffraction grating in 1821, after James Gregory discovered the phenomenon of diffraction grating and after the American astronomer David Rittenhouse invented the first manmade diffraction grating in 1785. Fraunhofer was the first who used a diffraction grating to obtain line spectra and the... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
The good university. Rector's period 2006–2011. Letter of Appreciation to Anders Hallberg. (Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. Writings concerning Uppsala University. C:93.) Uppsala 2011.
Fred Nyberg, "Anders Hallberg as a scientist" published in The good university.
Kerstin Sahlin, "A rectorship with quality as a guiding... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Watson was married to Carolyn Kerr. He died in his home in New Edinburgh after a brief illness on 17 December 2020 at the age of 84. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Barkla was born in Widnes, England, to John Martin Barkla, a secretary for the Atlas Chemical Company, and Sarah Glover, daughter of a watchmaker.
Barkla studied at the Liverpool Institute and proceeded to Liverpool University with a County Council Scholarship and a Bibby Scholarship. Barkla initially studied Mathemati... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
The theoretical underpinnings of standard least squares regression analysis are based on the assumption that the independent variable (often labelled as x) is measured without error as a design variable. The dependent variable (labeled y) is modeled as having uncertainty or error. Both independent and dependent measure... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Richard C. Lord (1910–1989) was an American chemist best known for his work in the field of spectroscopy. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Galina Khitrova (1959 – June 4, 2016) was a Russian-American physicist and optical scientist known for her research on cavity quantum electrodynamics, excitons, nonlinear optics, quantum dots, and vacuum Rabi oscillations. She was a professor of optical sciences at the University of Arizona. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Alfred Kastler (; 3 May 1902 – 7 January 1984) was a French physicist, and Nobel Prize laureate. He is known for the development of optical pumping. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 2012 he was awarded the Accomplishment by a Senior Scientist Award by the International Society for Computational Biology.
von Heijne is a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences since 1997 and a member of the Nobel Committee for Chemistry from 2001 to 2009, and the Committees chairman from 2007 to 2009. In ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Eamonn Francis Healy (born 25 September 1958) is an Irish-American professor of chemistry, organic chemistry, and biochemistry at St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas, where his research focuses on the design of structure-activity probes to elucidate enzymatic activity. Targets include HIV-1 integrase, the c-Kit an... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Raman married Lokasundari Ammal, daughter of S. Krishnaswami Iyer who was the Superintendent of Sea Customs at Madras, in 1907. The wedding day is popularly recorded as on 6 May, but Ramans great-niece and biographer, Uma Parameswaran, revealed a factual date of 2 June 1907. It was a self-arranged marriage and his wife... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
His PhD work engaged his interest in the role amphiphilicity plays in driving the interaction of bioactive molecules with cell membranes. He was awarded a long-term fellowship by the European Molecular Biology Organisation which enabled him to investigate the importance of amphiphilicity in protein translocation at Utr... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Gerhard F. Ecker is an Austrian medicinal chemist and expert in the fields of Pharmacoinformatics at the University of Vienna, where he is the Professor for Pharmacoinformatics and Head of the [http://pharminfo.univie.ac.at Pharmacoinformatics Research Group] at the Department of Medicinal Chemistry. He also coordinate... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Helen Miriam Berman is a Board of Governors Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Rutgers University and a former director of the RCSB Protein Data Bank (one of the member organizations of the Worldwide Protein Data Bank). A structural biologist, her work includes structural analysis of protein-nucleic acid co... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
* Dynamics of fast-folding proteins to make the connection between experiment and physics-based computer simulations of protein folding.
* FreI (Fast Relaxation Imaging) that combines fluorescence microscopy and fast temperature jump or osmotic pressure jump to study protein dynamics inside living cells a... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
*Member of the US National Academy of Sciences (1998)
*Member of Academia Sinica (1998)
*Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science (2011)
*Fellow of American Physics Society (1977)
*Fellow of Optica (formerly OSA) (2009)
*The Willis E. Lamb Award for Laser Science and Quantum Optics (2004)
*The MRS ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In 1926 he and Myfanwy Heulwen Roberts were married. They had one child together. He attended the Welsh Presbyterian Chapel in Garston and was involved with the Welsh community in Liverpool throughout his life. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Elena Besley (née Bichoutskaia) is a British scientist who is Professor of Theoretical and Computational Chemistry at the University of Nottingham. She holds a Royal Society Wolfson Fellowship and is Associate Editor of Nano Letters. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Sir Martin Ryle (27 September 1918 – 14 October 1984) was an English radio astronomer who developed revolutionary radio telescope systems (see e.g. aperture synthesis) and used them for accurate location and imaging of weak radio sources. In 1946 Ryle and Derek Vonberg were the first people to publish interferometric ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Prof William Swan FRSE PRSSA LLD (13 March 1818 in Edinburgh – 1 March 1894 in Shandon, Argyll) was a Scottish mathematician and physicist best known for his 1856 discovery of the Swan band. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Kroto was educated at Bolton School and went to the University of Sheffield in 1958, where he obtained a first-class honours BSc degree in Chemistry (1961) and a PhD in Molecular Spectroscopy (1964). During his time at Sheffield he also was the art editor of Arrows – the university student magazine, played tennis for t... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
By 1960 while at Harvard, he experimented with microwave spectroscopy. Bloembergen had modified the maser of Charles Townes, and in 1956, Bloembergen developed a crystal maser, which was more powerful than the standard gaseous version.
With the advent of the laser, he participated in the development of the field of las... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Arthur Leonard Schawlow (May 5, 1921 – April 28, 1999) was an American physicist who, along with Charles Townes, developed the theoretical basis for laser science. His central insight was the use of two mirrors as the resonant cavity to take maser action from microwaves to visible wavelengths. He shared the 1981 Nobel ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He had been the Mallinckrodt Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Harvard University until 2018, when he became the Lee Shau-kee Professor of Peking University. He was the Director of Biomedical Pioneering Innovation Center (BIOPIC) in 2010-2021, and the Director of Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Geno... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Isidor Isaac Rabi (; born Israel Isaac Rabi, July 29, 1898 – January 11, 1988) was an American physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1944 for his discovery of nuclear magnetic resonance, which is used in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). He was also one of the first scientists in the United States to work on ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Peter Andrew Kollman (July 24, 1944–May 25, 2001) was a professor of chemistry and pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of California, San Francisco.
He is known for his work in computational chemistry, molecular modeling and bioinformatics, especially for his role in the development of the AMBER force fiel... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Browning was also a member of The Aeronautical Society of Great Britain. In 1871, he constructed the first wind tunnel, located in Greenwich at Penn's Marine Engineering Works. It had been designed by another member of the Aeronautical Society, British engineer Francis Herbert Wenham. He was also a member of other scie... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
By 1814, Fraunhofer had invented the modern spectroscope. In the course of his experiments, he discovered a bright fixed line which appears in the orange color of the spectrum when it is produced by the light of fire. This line enabled him afterward to determine the absolute power of refraction in different substances.... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
*Tilden Lecturer of the Royal Society of Chemistry, 1981–82
*Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1990
*International Prize for New Materials American Physical Society, 1992 (with Robert Curl and Richard Smalley)
*Italgas Prize for Innovation in Chemistry, 1992
*Royal Society of Chemistry Longstaff Medal, 199... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Berman has been married twice, to engineer Victor Berman in the 1960s, and to molecular biologist Peter Young from 1976 to 1999. From the second marriage she has a son, Jason Asher Young (born 1979), a physicist.
During the 1980s, Berman was diagnosed with breast cancer. The experience made her more focused in her life... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Schulten is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a fellow of the Advanced Study Institute at Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 2018, she delivered the Francis D. Carlson Lecture in the Department of Biophysics at Johns Hopkins University. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Herschel wrote many papers and articles, including entries on meteorology, physical geography and the telescope for the eighth edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica. He also translated the Iliad of Homer.
In 1823, Herschel published his findings on the optical spectra of metal salts.
Herschel invented the actinometer ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Herschel made numerous important contributions to photography. He made improvements in photographic processes, particularly in inventing the cyanotype process, which became known as blueprints, and variations, such as the chrysotype. In 1839, he made a photograph on glass, which still exists, and experimented with some... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
By the early 1930s, Compton had become interested in cosmic rays. At the time, their existence was known but their origin and nature remained speculative. Their presence could be detected using a spherical "bomb" containing compressed air or argon gas and measuring its electrical conductivity. Trips to Europe, India, M... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Zewail died aged 70 on the morning of August 2, 2016. He was recovering from cancer, however, the exact cause of his death is unknown. Zewail returned to Egypt, but only his body was received at Cairo Airport. A military funeral was held for Zewail on August 7, 2016, at the El-Mosheer Tantawy mosque in Cairo, Egypt. Th... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Michael Lawrence Klein (born March 13, 1940, in London, England) is Laura H. Carnell Professor of Science and director of the Institute for Computational Molecular Science in the college of science and technology at Temple University in Philadelphia, US. He was previously the Hepburn Professor of Physical Science in t... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
The son of Helen Whytt and the Rev Andrew Melville, minister of Monimail (d. 29 July 1736), Melvill was a student at the University of Glasgow. In 1749, with Alexander Wilson, his landlord and later the first professor of astronomy at the University, they made the first recorded use of kites in meteorology. They measur... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 1969, Berman moved to the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, where she worked in Jenny P. Glusker's laboratory before starting her own independent research program as a faculty member in 1973. At Fox Chase, Berman became interested in nucleic acid structures and in bioinformatics. She knew that logical organiz... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Bruce Randall Donald (born 1958) is an American computer scientist and computational biologist. He is the James B. Duke Professor of Computer Science and Biochemistry at Duke University. He has made numerous contributions to several fields in Computer Science such as robotics, Microelectromechanical Systems (MEMS), Geo... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Dr. David Alter (1807–1881) was a doctor, scientist, and famous American inventor, son of John Alter and Eleanor Sheetz. "David began as a physician and scientist in Elderton, Pennsylvania in the 1830s. David Alter married (1st) Laura Rowley, and they settled in Elderton."
In 1836 Elderton, David Alter invented the ele... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Xiaoliang Sunney Xie (; born 24 June 1962) is a Chinese biophysicist well known for his contributions to the fields of single-molecule biophysical chemistry, coherent Raman Imaging and single-molecule genomics. In 2023, Xie renounced his U.S. citizenship in order to reclaim his Chinese citizenship. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In a 2010 publication Jurrie Reiding asserts that Debye may have been an MI6 spy. Reiding discovered that Debye was befriended by the well-documented spy Paul Rosbaud. They first met around 1930 when they were both working as editors for two scientific journals. They collaborated in the escape of Lise Meitner in 1938. ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Anders Jonas Ångström was born in Medelpad to Johan Ångström, and schooled in Härnösand. He moved to Uppsala in 1833 and was educated at Uppsala University, where in 1839 he became docent in physics. In 1842 he went to the Stockholm Observatory to gain experience in practical astronomical work, and the following year h... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* Mulliken Lecture, University of Georgia, USA (2011)
* Ranked within the top 500 chemists (only one among Korean nationals): H-index ranking of well known living chemists: Update online by Chemistry World, UK, on Dec 12,2011
* National Scientist of the Republic of Korea (2010)
* Korea Premium Science and Technology Aw... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
* 1994 Rutherford Memorial Medal in Chemistry from the Royal Society of Canada
* 1995 J. Heyrovsky Honorary Medal for Merit in the Chemical Sciences from the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Zewail's work brought him international attention, receiving awards and honors throughout most of his career for his work in chemistry and physics. In 1999, Zewail became the first Egyptian to receive a science Nobel Prize when he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Zewail gave his Nobel Lecture on "Femtochemistr... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Born in Alice, Texas, United States, Curl was the son of a Methodist minister. Due to his fathers missionary work, his family moved several times within southern and southwestern Texas, and the elder Curl was involved in starting the San Antonio Medical Centers Methodist Hospital. Curl attributes his interest in chemi... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Harrison has authored or co-authored a wide range of articles
Harrison's research career started with his PhD, which was concerned with developing a quantitative and
predictive theory of the electronic states in substitutionally disordered systems.
Harrison has furthered the practical use of quantum theory for predic... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In 1929, Hartree was appointed to the Beyer Chair of Applied Mathematics at the University of Manchester. In 1933, he visited Vannevar Bush at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and learned first hand about his differential analyser. Immediately on his return to Manchester, he set about building his own analyser... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
MetropolitanVickers was a British heavy industrial firm, wellknown for industrial electrical equipment and generators, street lighting, electronics, steam turbines, and diesel locomotives. They built the Metrovick 950, the first commercial transistorised computer. In 1917, a Research and Education Department was establ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Rudolf Ludwig Mössbauer (German spelling: Mößbauer; ; 31 January 1929 – 14 September 2011) was a German physicist best known for his 1957 discovery of recoilless nuclear resonance fluorescence, for which he was awarded the 1961 Nobel Prize in Physics. This effect, called the Mössbauer effect, is the basis for Mössbauer... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
José Elguero was born on Christmas Day, 1934, in Madrid, Spain, where he graduated in chemistry from the Central University, now University Complutense of Madrid (B.Sc., 1957). In spite of the possibility to continue his studies with either Professor Francisco Fariña or Professor Jesús Morcillo in Madrid he moved to Fr... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Williams studied at the University of California, Berkeley receiving a bachelor of science degree in 1962. He completed a doctorate at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1965 with a thesis titled . His doctoral advisor was Donald Edward Osterbrock. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
William Henry Fox Talbot FRS FRSE FRAS (; 11 February 180017 September 1877) was an English scientist, inventor, and photography pioneer who invented the salted paper and calotype processes, precursors to photographic processes of the later 19th and 20th centuries. His work in the 1840s on photomechanical reproduction ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* 2004 – Fellow of the American Physical Society for "contributions to the application of Raman scattering in nanotechnology and the biomedical field."
* Fellow of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy
* 2000 - Rockefeller-Mauze visiting chair award at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
* 1999 - Meggers award of the ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Professor Kastler spent most of his research career at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris where he started after the war with his student, Jean Brossel a small research group on spectroscopy.
Over the forty years that followed, this group has trained many of young physicists and had a significant impact on the devel... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* 2009 Awarded a D.Sc. by Liverpool University.
* 2010 Appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2010 Birthday Honours.
* 2012 Conferred the title of Academician by the Academy of Social Sciences.
* 2013 Awarded an Honorary Doctorate of the University of Bolton (DUniv).
* 2013 Elected as a non-m... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In 1988 he started his own hedge fund, D. E. Shaw & Co, which employed proprietary algorithms for securities trading. In 2018, Forbes estimated his net worth at $6.2 billion. He is also a senior research fellow at the Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics at Columbia University, and an adjunct professor o... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
* Obituary, William Lassell, 1880.
* Astronomical Drawing, 1882.
* Obituary, Warren de la Rue, 1889.
* On a new group of lines in the photographic spectrum of Sirius, 1890.
* The System of the Stars, 1890.
* On Wolf and Rayet's Bright-Line Stars in Cygnus, 1891.
* The Astrolabe, 1895.
* The Astrolabe. II. History, 1895... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Harrison was educated at University College London and the University of Birmingham, graduating with a BSc in Physics in 1986 and a PhD in Theoretical Physics in 1989. He performed the research that led to his PhD within the Theory and Computational Science department at Daresbury Laboratory. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Miguel Antonio Catalán y Sañudo was born in Zaragoza, he obtained his degree in chemistry from the University of Zaragoza and received his doctorate in Madrid in 1917 for his thesis about spectrochemistry. In 1920, he began work as a researcher at Imperial College London. Examining the spectrum of the arc of manganese,... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* Elected Member, National Academy of Sciences of the USA (2011)
* American Chemical Society (ACS) National Award for Computers in Chemical and Pharmaceutical Research (2008)
* Elected Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2006)
* UCSD SPPS Associated Students Teaching Award (2003)
* UC Chancellor's Associates... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Sir Charles Wheatstone (; 6 February 1802 – 19 October 1875), was an English scientist and inventor of many scientific breakthroughs of the Victorian era, including the English concertina, the stereoscope (a device for displaying three-dimensional images), and the Playfair cipher (an encryption technique). However, Wh... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Werner Urland was born in Berlin on 13 April 1944. Between 1963 and 1968 he studied and graduated in chemistry in Giessen, Germany. The interval 1968-1971 was dedicated to the work of a doctoral thesis, under the supervision of Professor R. Hoppe, on ternary oxides of noble metals. The PhD stage incorporated a scholars... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Thomas Melvill(e) (1726 – December 1753) was a Scottish natural philosopher, who was active in the fields of spectroscopy and astronomy. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Between 1911 and 1913, Hess undertook the work that won him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1936. For many years, scientists had been puzzled by the levels of ionizing radiation measured in the atmosphere. The assumption at the time was that the radiation would decrease as the distance from the earth, the then assumed so... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Bunsen was one of the most universally admired scientists of his generation. He was a master teacher, devoted to his students, and they were equally devoted to him. At a time of vigorous and often caustic scientific debates, Bunsen always conducted himself as a perfect gentleman, maintaining his distance from theoretic... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
From 1950 to 1962, Brockhouse carried out research at Atomic Energy of Canadas Chalk River Nuclear Laboratory. Here he was joined by P. K. Iyengar, who is treated as the father of Indias nuclear program.
In 1962, he became a professor at McMaster University in Canada, where he remained until his retirement in 1984.
Bro... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Richard Collins Lord was born in Louisville, Kentucky on October 10, 1910. He received his Ph.D. in physical chemistry from Johns Hopkins University in 1936. He spent two years, from 1936 to 1938, as a Fellow of the United States National Research Council, first at the University of Michigan and then at the University ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Lai-Sheng Wang (, born 1961 in Henan, China) is an experimental physical chemist currently serving as the Chair of the Chemistry Department at Brown University. Wang is known for his work on atomic gold pyramids and planar boron clusters. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Cora Gertrude Burwell (June 25, 1883 – June 20, 1982) was an American astronomical researcher specialized in stellar spectroscopy. She was based at Mount Wilson Observatory from 1907 to 1949. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Donald’s early research was in the field of robotic motion planning and distributed manipulation. Later he has made numerous contributions to MEMS and Micro-robotics, and designed MEMS micro-robots with dimensions of 60 µm by 250 µm by 10 µm.
Recently, he has conducted research in the areas of Structural Molecular Biol... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Ahmed Hassan Zewail was born on February 26, 1946, in Damanhur, Egypt, and was raised in Desouk. He received Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in chemistry from Alexandria University before moving to the United States to complete his PhD at the University of Pennsylvania under the supervision of Robin M... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Sylvain Liberman (1934 – 5 August 1988) was a French physicist, specializing in atomic physics and laser spectroscopy. He is known as the leader of the scientific team that made the first measurements of the optical spectrum of francium. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Zare earned his BA in chemistry and physics in 1961 and his PhD in 1964 in physical and analytical chemistry at Harvard University. As an undergraduate he worked with William Klemperer. Zare moved to the University of California, Berkeley to do PhD work with Dudley Herschbach, then returned 2 years later when Herschbac... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
During World War I he served in France with the American Expeditionary Force, holding the rank of major of engineers. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Alfred Gordon Gaydon (26 September 1911 – 16 April 2004) was a leading spectroscopist and combustion scientist.
He was brought up at Surbiton, Surrey, where he attended Kingston Grammar School. There he became a keen oarsman, later rowing for
Imperial College, London, and Kingston Rowing Club. In 1929 he graduated in P... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Kneipp was born in Thuringen and studied physics at Friedrich Schiller University and Humboldt University Berlin. She was an assistant professor at Harvard University Medical School and has been a visiting professor at MIT.
She has written about her memories of Millie Dresselhaus. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 1918, Dent joined the Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) at Farnborough, Hampshire. The First World War opened new employment opportunities for women, and RAE was one of the first military establishments to recruit women into engineering, and mathematical and computational research. In the same period that Dent was ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In 1902 he married Greta Ervin Blanchard (1876-1955). They had three sons: Clark Blanchard, Glenn Allan, and Max Franklin. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
William Lester Self Andrews is an American chemist who makes contributions to the ongoing development of quantum chemistry of metallic complexes. He is the Professor Emeritus of Chemistry at the University of Virginia. He won the Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy in 2010 for "vibrational spectroscopy in ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 1843 Wheatstone communicated an important paper to the Royal Society, entitled An Account of Several New Processes for Determining the Constants of a Voltaic Circuit. It contained an exposition of the well known balance for measuring the electrical resistance of a conductor, which still goes by the name of Wheatston... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
The Ångström unit (1 Å = 10 m) in which the wavelengths of light and interatomic spacings in condensed matter are sometimes measured is named after him. The unit is also used in crystallography as well as spectroscopy.
The crater Ångström on the Moon is named in his honour.
One of the main building complexes of Uppsala... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Thomas Edwin Nevin (4 October 1906 in Bristol, Somerset – 16 July 1986 in Dublin) was an Irish physicist and academic who had a distinguished career in the field of molecular spectroscopy. He was Professor of Experimental Physics and Dean of the Faculty of Science in University College Dublin from 1963 to 1979. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Dayhoff's husband was Edward S. Dayhoff, an experimental physicist who worked with magnetic resonance and with lasers. They had two daughters who are also academics, Ruth and Judith.
Judith Dayhoff has a Mathematical Biophysics PhD from University of Pennsylvania and is the author of Neural network architectures: An in... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In 1979, Still reported the first total synthesis of periplanone B, the potent sex pheromone of the American cockroach. Although the structural connectivity of this compound had been established spectroscopically, Still's synthesis confirmed the relative stereochemical relationships present in this natural product. A... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
A co-author of over 400 publications that have been cited over 50,000 times (H index > 100), the recipient of over 75 honors and awards from 15 different countries, Saykally is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and in 2004 received the Ernest Orlando Lawrence Aw... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* Lenin Prize (1959)
* Nobel Prize in Physics (1964, with the pioneering work done in the field of quantum electronics)
* Hero of Socialist Labour — twice (1969, 1982)
* Gold Medal of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences (1975)
* A. Volta Gold Medal (1977)
* Kalinga Prize (1986)
* USSR State Prize (1989)
* Lomonosov Gr... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Filizola's research program is mainly focused on G Protein-Coupled Receptors (GPCRs), which are the targets for about half of all currently used drugs. Special effort in her lab has been devoted to the subfamily of opioid receptors to discover/design novel painkillers with reduced abuse liability and other adverse effe... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Helmut Schwarz first learned to be a chemical technician and then went on to study chemistry at the TU Berlin. He completed his studies in 1971 and obtained his PhD in 1972 and his Habilitation in 1974 under Ferdinand Bohlmann. He pursued post-doctoral work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and in the ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
*E.F. Healy "In Defense of a Heuristic Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics", J. Chem. Educ. 2010, 87, 559–563.
*Eamonn F. Healy, Skylar Johnson, Charles Hauser, and Peter King "Tyrosine kinase inhibition: Ligand binding and conformational change in c-Kit and c-Abl." FEBS Lett. 2009, 583, 2899-2906
*Eamonn F. Healy, J... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Sauer studied chemistry from 1967 to 1972 at the Humboldt University of Berlin and was awarded a doctorate in chemistry in 1974. He continued to do research there until 1977, when he joined the Academy of Sciences, Central Institute of Physical Chemistry in Berlin, one of the leading scientific institutes of the former... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
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