Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Jerome Karle (born Jerome Karfunkle; June 18, 1918 – June 6, 2013) was an American physical chemist. Jointly with Herbert A. Hauptman , he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1985, for the direct analysis of crystal structures using X-ray scattering techniques .
Jerome Karle (1918–2013), 1985 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; Paul Karrer (1889–1971), 1937 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; Karl Wilhelm Gottlob Kastner (1783–1857) Alan R. Katritzky (1928–2014), Pioneer in heterocyclic chemistry; Joyce Jacobson Kaufman (1929–2016), American chemist and inventor of conformational topology
At least 25 laureates have received the Nobel Prize for contributions in the field of organic chemistry, more than any other field of chemistry. [5] Two Nobel Prize laureates in Chemistry, Germans Richard Kuhn (1938) and Adolf Butenandt (1939), were not allowed by their government to accept the prize. They would later receive a medal and ...
Nobel Prizes. Physics – Klaus von Klitzing – for his discovery of the quantization of electrical resistance; Chemistry – Herbert A. Hauptman, Jerome Karle; Medicine – Michael S. Brown, Joseph L. Goldstein; Turing Award – Richard Karp – for his work on computational complexity theory
Herbert Aaron Hauptman (February 14, 1917 – October 23, 2011) [2] was an American mathematician and Nobel laureate. [3] He pioneered and developed a mathematical method that has changed the whole field of chemistry and opened a new era in research in determination of molecular structures of crystallized materials.
1985 - Jerome Karle shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Herbert A. Hauptman "for their outstanding achievements in the development of direct methods for the determination of crystal structures". Karle developed the theoretical basis for multiple-wavelength anomalous diffraction (MAD).
Shared the 1929 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with H.von Euler-Chelpin [al] [164] Friedrich Bergius: October 11, 1884 Wrocław, Poland March 30, 1949 Buenos Aires, Argentina 1929, 1931: Shared the 1931 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with C.Bosch [ae]. [165] Walter Norman Haworth: March 19, 1883 White Coppice, England March 19, 1950 Barnt Green, England
Scott J. Miller (born December 11, 1966) is an American organic chemist serving as Sterling Professor of Chemistry at Yale University and as the editor-in-chief of the Journal of Organic Chemistry. [1]