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         Haber Fritz:     more books (45)
  1. Run-off receptacle.(Lake Winnipeg): An article from: Canada and the World Backgrounder
  2. The Use of Poison Gases in the First World War: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Sue Rabbitt Roff, 2000
  3. Einstein's Gift by Vern Thiessen, 2003-09-01

61. First World War.com - Who's Who - Fritz Haber
fritz haber (18681934) played a prominent role in developing Germany's chemical afterthe conclusion of the war haber was awarded the nobel Prize for
http://www.firstworldwar.com/bio/haber.htm
Who's Who: Fritz Haber
Updated - Sunday, 5 May, 2002 Fritz Haber (1868-1934) played a prominent role in developing Germany's chemical warfare programme during World War One. Haber was born in Breslau and studied from 1886-91 at the universities of Heidelberg and Berlin and at the Technical School at Charlottenberg. Haber qualified as a private lecturer in 1896 with a thesis on his own experimental studies on the decomposition and combustion of hydrocarbons. Ten years later he was appointed Professor of Physical Chemistry and Electrochemistry and Director of the Institute at Karlsruhe set up to study these subjects. Serving as Director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry in Berlin from 1911-33, Haber willingly responded to a request from the German Army at the outbreak of war to investigate the possibility of substituting explosives in shells for poison gases. Haber shortly thereafter oversaw trials with gas shells and soon recommended the use of such gas via manual release cylinders placed in the German front line, used to initial great effect during the Second Battle of Ypres in April 1915 (which he personally directed).

62. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
A listing of nobel Prize winners in chemistry from 1901 to 1999.Category Science Chemistry History......Deutsche Version; nobel Prize for Chemistry (with pictures). of plant pigments, particularlyof chlorophyll 1916 1917 - 1918 fritz haber (Germany, 1868-12-09
http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/diverse/bib/nobel_chemie_e.html
Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (Netherlands, 1852-08-30 - 1911-03-01)
Discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and of the osmotic pressure in solutions
Emil H. Fischer (Germany, 1852-10-09 - 1919-07-15)
Synthetic studies in the area of sugar and purine groups
Svante A. Arrhenius (Sweden, 1859-02-19 - 1927-10-02)
Theory of electrolytic dissociation
Sir William Ramsay (United Kingdom, 1852-10-02 - 1916-07-23)
Discovery of the indifferent gaseous elements in air (noble gases)
Adolf von Baeyer (Germany, 1835-10-31 - 1917-08-20)
Organic dyes and hydroaromatic compounds
Henri Moissan (France, 1852-09-28 - 1907-02-20)
Investigation and isolation of the element fluorine
Eduard Buchner (Germany, 1860-05-20 - 1917-08-13)
Biochemical studies, discovery of fermentation without cells
Sir Ernest Rutherford (United Kingdom, 1871-08-30 - 1937-10-19)
Decay of the elements, chemistry of radioactive substances
Wilhelm Ostwald (Germany, 1853-09-02 - 1932-04-04)
Catalysis, chemical equilibria and reaction rates

63. Vinegar Spray Research & (2) Fritz Haber
2. The story of fritz haber, who won a nobel prize for his work on N fixation,was presented by playwright Vern Thiessen (Einstein's Gift is the play about
http://csf.colorado.edu/archive/2003/bdnow/msg01572.html

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64. Nobel Prize For Chemistry
nobel Prize for Chemistry. 1918 fritz haber (Germany, 9.12.1868 29.1.1934) Germany,Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut (now fritz-haber-Institut) für physikalische
http://lem.ch.unito.it/chemistry/nobel_chemistry.html
Nobel Prize for Chemistry
This directory is compiled and maintained by Carlo Nervi and Mauro Ravera
Feedback cheerfully accepted.
Last updated ( or ): 13 October 1999
Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (The Netherlands, 30.8.1852 - 1.3.1911)
Germany, Berlin University,
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions"
Hermann Emil Fischer (Germany, 9.10.1852 - 15.7.1919)
Germany, Berlin University,
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his work on sugar and purine syntheses"
Svante August Arrhenius (Sweden, 19.2.1859 - 2.10.1927)
Sweden, Stockholm University,
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation" Sir William Ramsay (Great Britain, 2.10.1852 - 23.7.1916) Great Britain, London University, "in recognition of his services in the discovery of the inert gaseous elements in air, and his determination of their place in the periodic system" Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer (Germany, 31.10.1835 - 20.8.1917)

65. Haber-Bosch
fritz haber (18681934), born in Breslau (Germany), was a physical chemist specializingin practical NH 3 from N 2 , for which he received the nobel Prize in
http://www.soils.wisc.edu/~barak/soilscience326/haber.htm
Essential Elements for Plant Growth
Haber-Bosch Process of Nitrogen Fixation
Fritz Haber (1868-1934), born in Breslau (Germany), was a physical chemist specializing in practical and technical applications of science. His single greatest achievement, as part of an amazingly productive career, was the successful synthesis of ammonia, NH from N , for which he received the Nobel Prize in 1919. His Nobel lecture , "The synthesis of ammonia from its elements", described the significance of his achievement in terms of agricultural fertilizers and the long quest for fixed nitrogen, originally by reacting nitrogen with oxygen to form nitric acid. "Agricultural husbandry essentially maintains the balance of bound nitro-gen. However, with the advent of the industrial age, the products of the soil are carried off from where the crops are grown to far-off places where they are consumed, with the result that the bound nitrogen is no longer returned to the earth from which it was taken. "This has caused the world-wide economic necessity of supplying bound nitrogen to the soil. This need is increased by national economic considera-tions, which, with the denser population of industrialized countries, call for increased agricultural productivity at home, and it is yet further increased by the fact that expanding industry requires fixed nitrogen for many of its own chemical purposes. The demand for nitrogen, like that for coal, indicates how far removed our way of life has become from that of the people who (themselves do fertilize the soil they cultivate).

66. Storia Della Chimica: Fritz Haber, Per La Scienza E Per La Patria
Translate this page fu per lui un colpo durissimo, nè il premio nobel conferitogli appena avviamo a considerarel'ultimo atto, tragico della vita di fritz haber, dobbiamo volgere
http://www.minerva.unito.it/Storia/ChimicaClassica/Azoto/AZOTO2.htm
Per la scienza e per la patria: Fritz Haber
A leggere il racconto che Haber ha fatto del modo fortuito con cui si procurò il 'posto' accademico si può essere certi che il 'caso' ebbe un forte ruolo, tuttavia l'entrata in scena del caso non poteva essere più opportuna: da allora Haber operò ininterrottamente nella zona di confine tra la ricerca fondamentale (la conoscenza per il suo valore 'contemplativo') e la ricerca applicata (la conoscenza nel suo valore d'uso, per l'uomo sociale), fondando in pochi anni, ed a costo di un lavoro massacrante, una vera e propria scuola di elettrochimica. Dopo appena due anni è già Privat-Dozent , dopo cinque è professore straordinario, e a 37 anni è, finalmente, professore di Chimica-fisica ed Elettrochimica. Il 'periodo' di Karlsruhe non è solo il succedersi delle tappe di una carriera, brillante ma non eccezionale, in realtà il suo rapporto con il mondo 'esterno' è intenso e continuo, contrassegnato dalle vicende drammatiche della sintesi dell'ammoniaca che porta il nome di Haber e del dirigente della BASF Karl Bosch. Di queste vicende scientifiche e tecniche ho già parlato nel primo volume nato dalla mia collaborazione con RADAR. Nella prossima sezione mi soffermerò piuttosto sull'impatto nella storia europea che ebbe il processo Haber-Bosch. Il secondo 'luogo' del destino scientifico di Haber si trova in un ameno sobborgo di Berlino, a Dahlem. Qui nel 1913 fu inaugurato dall'imperatore Guglielmo II il Kaiser ilhelm-Institut für Physikalische- und Elektrochemie, un istituto di ricerca concepito e

67. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
3. PRIZE YEAR. nobel CHEMISTS. SUPERVISOR. Ph.D. UNIVERSITY. DATES. Age (years).Age at Prize. 1950. 64. 41. 1918. haber, fritz. Carl Liebermann. 1891. BerlinCharlottenberg.
http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/CHEM/
Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
Department of Chemistry, York University
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ONTARIO M3J 1P3, CANADA For suggestions, corrections, additional information, and comments please send e-mails to jandraos@yorku.ca http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/ NOBEL PRIZE CHEMISTRY YEAR NAMES OF SCIENTISTS NATIONALITY TYPE OF CHEMISTRY Jacobus van't Hoff Dutch physical Emil Fischer German organic Svante Arrhenius Swedish physical Sir William Ramsay British physical Adolf von Baeyer German organic Henri Moissan French inorganic Eduard Buchner German organic/bioorganic Lord Ernest Rutherford British nuclear Wilhelm Ostwald Latvian physical Otto Wallach German organic Marie Curie Polish-French nuclear Victor Grignard French organic Paul Sabatier French organic Alfred Werner German inorganic Theodore Williams Richards American physical Richard Martin Willstatter German organic no prize awarded no prize awarded Fritz Haber German physical/industrial no prize awarded Walther Hermann Nernst German physical Frederick Soddy British nuclear Francis William Aston British analytical Fritz Pregl Slovenian analytical no prize awarded Richard Zsigmondy Austrian physical Theodor Svedberg Swedish physical Heinrich Wieland German organic Adolf Windaus German organic Hans von Euler-Chelpin German bioorganic Arthur Harden British bioorganic Hans Fischer German bioorganic Friedrich Bergius German physical Carl Bosch German physical Irving Langmuir American physical no prize awarded Harold Urey American nuclear Frederic Joliot French nuclear Irene Joliot-Curie French nuclear Peter Debye Dutch physical Sir Walter Haworth

68. Premi Nobel Per La Chimica
haber fritz; Hahn Otto; Harden Sir Arthur; HasselOdd; Walther Hermann; Newlands John Alexander Reina; Newton Issac; nobel Alfred; nobel
http://www.itchiavari.org/chimica/tabelle/biografie.html
Biografie di Chimici
  • Alder Kurt Anfinsen Christian B Arrhenius Svante August Aston Francis William ... Home Page
    Istituto tecnico statale commerciale e per geometri di Chiavari (Genova - Italia)
  • 69. Nobel Prize In Chemistry Since 1901
    Translate this page nobel Prize in Chemistry since 1901 Year, Winners. 1901, Hoff, Jacobus HenricusVan't. 1918, haber, fritz. 1920, Nernst, Walther Hermann. 1921, Soddy, Frederick.
    http://www.planet101.com/nobel_chemistry_hist.htm
    Nobel Prize in Chemistry since 1901 Year Winners Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't Fischer, Hermann Emil Arrhenius, Svante August Ramsay, Sir William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Von Moissan, Henri Buchner, Eduard Rutherford, Lord Ernest Ostwald, Wilhelm Wallach, Otto Curie, Marie Grignard, Victor; Sabatier, Paul Werner, Alfred Richards, Theodore William Willstatter, Richard Martin Haber, Fritz Nernst, Walther Hermann Soddy, Frederick Aston, Francis William Pregl, Fritz Zsigmondy, Richard Adolf Svedberg, The Wieland, Heinrich Otto Windaus, Adolf Otto Reinhold Euler-chelpin, Hans Karl August Von; Harden, Sir Arthur Fischer, Hans Bergius, Friedrich; Bosch, Carl Langmuir, Irving Urey, Harold Clayton Joliot, Frederic; Joliot-Curie, Irene Debye, Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus Haworth, Sir Walter Norman; Karrer, Paul Kuhn, Richard Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann; Ruzicka, Leopold De Hevesy, George Hahn, Otto Virtanen, Artturi Ilmari Northrop, John Howard; Stanley, Wendell Meredith; Sumner, James Batcheller Robinson, Sir Robert Tiselius, Arne Wilhelm Kaurin Giauque, William Francis

    70. Gold Aus Dem Meer: Fritz Habers Forschungen 1922-1927
    fritz haber, Director of the KaiserWilhelm-Institute for Electrochemistry and PhysicalChemistry such as the chemical physicist and later nobel Laureate james
    http://www.gnt-verlag.de/programm/46/rez_ambix2002.shtml
    Buchbesprechung
    Ralf Hahn
    Gold aus dem Meer

    101, 12 Abb., Pb., 13,50 Euro
    ISBN 3-928186-46-9
    Rezensionen
    Dietrich Stoltzenberg in: Ambix 49, No. 1 (March 2002), pp. 83 f.
    Fritz Haber, Director of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institute for Electrochemistry and Physical Chemistry in Berlin from 1911-1933, had been the "Father of chemical warfare" during World War I and placed his institute at the disposal of the military forces. After the war he still had financial recourses and installations from his previous activities. With these means he tried in 1919 to build up a multidisciplinary institute. Well known scientists such as the chemical physicist and later Nobel Laureate james Franck and the physicist Gustav Hertz were working at the Institute. But already in 1920 the financial situation deteriorated. In this situation Haber tried to keep the institute going in several ways. One of his most important activities was a project of harvesting gold from the sea. This project, which forms the subject of the present book, started with first analytical work in 1921 and ended with the publication of the results in the year 1927. After having studied earlier work on the concentration of gold in the sea, Haber assumed a content of 6 mg per ton of seawater and concluded that therefore an economic separation of gold would be possible. Two coworkers were asked to develop methods to separate the gold and to analyse it quantitatively. With these methods they found a content of gold of 1.5-8.0 mg per ton of water.

    71. Gold Aus Dem Meer: Fritz Habers Forschungen 1922-1927
    Arrhenius in Stockholm in June, 1920 when haber received the nobel Prize richly documentedand illustrated booklet with Roald Hoffmann's poem, fritz haber (1993
    http://www.gnt-verlag.de/programm/46/rez_bhc2001.shtml
    Buchbesprechung
    Ralf Hahn
    Gold aus dem Meer

    101, 12 Abb., Pb., 13,50 Euro
    ISBN 3-928186-46-9
    Rezensionen
    Paul R. Jones in: Bull. Hist. Chem. 26 (2001), No. 2, pp. 136 f.
    For those who may have read about Haber's quest for gold from the ocean in his biography (D. Stoltzenberg, Fritz Haber: Chemiker, Nobelpreisträger, Deutscher, Jude, Wiley-VCH Verlags GmbH, Weinheim, 1994; see review, Bull. Hist Chem., 1999, 24, 77-78.), this booklet by Hahn will provide 100 pages of detail about the ambitious, unsuccessful venture. This gold-covered publication, the result of a master's degree study (Magisterarbeit), contains an introduction by Lutz Haber (1920-), youngest son of Fritz Haber and a science historian living in Bath, England. The major portion of this booklet is taken up with Haber's research project on gold, carried out at the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institute in Berlin, from 1922-1927, in "Abteilung M." There is a suggestion – although undocumented – that Haber may have been given the idea to pursue extraction of gold from seawater by Arrhenius in Stockholm in June, 1920 when Haber received the Nobel Prize. The motivation for such an ambitious undertaking was the idea that recovery of gold would serve as a source of repayment of Germany's huge war debt, amounting to over 200 billion Goldmarks. Even reduced to 132 billion by 1921, this sum would have been the equivalent of 50,000 tons of gold. The research got underway by 1922; carried out by Haber's institute associates, it led to six doctoral dissertations in the next six years. One of those doctoral students, Johannes Jaenicke, published a short description of the project in

    72. History Of Chemistry
    Grignard, François Auguste Victor Grignard, Grignard, Grignard reagent fritz haber1918 (18681934), nobel Prize in Chemistry 1918, fritz haber , fritz haber
    http://www.chemistrycoach.com/history_of_chemistry.htm
    Biographies of Chemists
    and some physicists including all Nobel Prize winners in chemistry through 2000 [Nobel Prize Year]
    Last updated September 2, 2001 All links were last verified between June 30, 2001 and September 2, 2001.
    The links are organized from most comprehensive to least, except that foreign language links generally appear at the end. Although I have not given information about each link, you can learn a lot by passing the cursor over the link and reading the web address. Kurt Alder Kurt Alder Kurt Alder Kurt Alder ... Sir Humphry Davy; Electricity and Chemical Affinity , Sir Humphry Davy, Sir Humphry Davy Sir Humphry Davy
    Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus Debye
    Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1936 ... Roald Hoffmann on NT , " The same and not the same " (highly recommended for high school students), "In Praise of Synthesis" A proporsed Methodological Improvement... Oxygen Prix Nobel de 1980 à 1984 ...
    Irene Joliot-Curie
    and Jean Frederic Joliot Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1935 Frédéric and Irène Joliot-Curie Irene Joliot-Curie ... Dr. Jerome Karle

    73. Jewish Nobel Prize Winners Pre 1934
    JEWISH nobel PRIZE WINNERS (Prior to 1934) nobel PRIZE WINNERS Awards to JewsPre haber, fritz Born in Breslau, 1868 Died in Basle, 1934; awarded prize in
    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~blkyn/Jewish/Nobel.html
    enter name and hit return Find in Page JEWISH NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS RETURN to JEWISH Main Return to VOTE Main Return to BROOKLYN Main

    74. Fritz Haber
    fritz haber (1868 1934). haber, after watching early trials with gas shells, proposedreleasing gas gas masks, leading to protests against his nobel Prize 1918
    http://www.fh.huji.ac.il/main/haber.html
    Fritz Haber
    German chemist whose conversion of atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia opened the way for the synthetic fertilizer industry. His study of the combustion of hydrocarbons led to the commercial cracking or fractional distillation of natural oil (petroleum) into its components (for example, diesel, gasoline, and paraffin). In electrochemistry, he was the first to demonstrate that oxidation and reduction take place at the electrodes; from this he developed a general electrochemical theory. At the outbreak of war, the German Army asked the Institute to investigate substitutes for explosive in shells, and poison gas was suggested. Haber, after watching early trials with gas shells, proposed releasing gas from cylinders. He became one of the principals in the German chemical warfare effort, devising weapons and gas masks, leading to protests against his Nobel Prize 1918.

    75. Foreword
    For his discoveries in the field of macromolecular chemistry Staudinger was awardedthe nobel Prize in 1953. fritz haber joined the laboratory of Bunte in 1896
    http://www.chemie.uni-karlsruhe.de/Fakultaet/history.html
    Historical Note
    The University of Karlsruhe (TH) was founded as a Polytechnische Schule in 1825 having as an example the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris. As such it is the first Technical University or Technische Hochschule (TH) in Germany.
    Print of the "Polytechnische Schule" in 1825
    From the beginning the main purpose was to offer a higher technical education on a scientific and mathematical basis (see Festschrift zur 125-Jahrfeier , edited by E. Terres, Selbstverlag der TH Karlsruhe , 1950, p. 3).
    Although chemistry was taught from the beginning, a basic advancement of teaching and research in chemistry commenced in 1840, when Carl Weltzien started his career in Karlsruhe. He erected a new and well equipped chemistry laboratory which at that time had a prototype character for many universities. He is particularly renowned for chairing the first International Chemistry Congress which took place in Karlsruhe in 1860. Among the leading chemists of Europe - more than 120 attended - were Stanislao Cannizzaro (Italy), Dimitrii I. Mendeleev (Russia), and Lothar Meyer (Germany). As an aftermath of the discussions at the Karlsruhe Congress the first clear statement of the periodic table of the elements was made in 1869 by Mendeleev and in 1868/1870 by Lothar Meyer. Since 1850 two chairs in chemistry existed in Karlsruhe, that of Weltzien in general chemistry and a second in chemical technology. When Weltzien retired in 1868 he was followed by Lothar Meyer.

    76. BASF Polska | Did You Know | Nobel Laureates
    In period 19051915, together with fritz haber, he was actively involved inthe In 1931 he was honored with nobel Price in chemistry for his eminent
    http://www.basf.pl/index.php3?d=noblisci&lang=en

    77. Prix Nobel De Chimie - Wikipedia
    Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Voir aussi Prix nobel. 1914 TheodoreWilliam Richards; 1915 Richard Martin Willstätter; 1918 fritz haber;
    http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prix_Nobel_de_Chimie
    Accueil Modifications récentes Modifier cette page Historique Pages spéciales Préférences Liste de suivi Modifications récentes Copier un fichier Liste des images Liste des participants Statistiques Une page au hasard Pages orphelines Images orphelines Les plus populaires Les plus demandées Articles courts Articles longs Nouvelles pages Toutes les pages Adresses IP bloquées Page de Maintenance Librairies en ligne Version imprimable Discuter
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    Autres langues: English Dansk Español Italiano ... Polski
    Prix Nobel de chimie
    (Redirigé depuis Prix Nobel de Chimie Voir aussi Prix Nobel

    78. Einstein’s German World. Fritz Stern
    during this period. nobel chemistry laureate fritz haber was his godfatherand a longtime friend of his parents. A member of the
    http://chemed.boisestate.edu/bibs/0005004/540214gk.htm
    The Chemical Educator, Vol. 5, No. 4, S1430-4171(00)04408-1, 10.1007/s00897000408a, © 2000 Springer-Verlag New York, Inc. Einstein’s German World. Fritz Stern. ix + 335 pp. Princeton University Press: Princeton, NJ, 1999. $24.95; £15.95.ISBN 0-691-05939-X. Reviewed by George B. Kauffman, California State University Fresno george_kauffman@csufresno.edu While walking with Fritz Stern to a West Berlin exhibit in April 1979 commemorating the centenary of the births of Einstein, Max von Laue, Otto Hahn, and Lise Meitner, French political philosopher Raymond Aron remarked that the twentieth century “could have been Germany’s century.” By 1900 the Reich was Europe’s pre-eminent power with a vital culture, unrivaled educational system, authoritarian academic–industrial–military complex, and extraordinary scientific accomplishments. The country was poised to achieve true greatness, but its prospects went unfulfilled, culminating in two world wars and the Holocaust. In this collection of invited lectures and essays, previously published in German or English but revised in the light of new archival materials from Germany, the United States, Israel, and Switzerland, and updated with references as late as 1998, Fritz Stern, University Professor Emeritus at Columbia University, a prize-winning historian and the author of a number of books on the history of modern Europe, explores the ambiguous promise of Germany before Hitler, its appalling decline into moral nihilism during the Nazi régime, and aspects of its remarkable recovery since World War II.

    79. AldeaEducativa.com Contenidos Y Consultas Educativas
    Translate this page Premios nobel de 1918. Planck, Max Karl EL. No se concedió -, Paz. El monto en metálicofue asignado al fondo especial de esta categoría del premio. haber, fritz.
    http://www.aldeaeducativa.com/aldea/Nobel1e.asp?Which=1918

    80. Ficha 2
    Translate this page Completar el trabajo con los nuevos premios nobel que se otorguen. ALEMANIA. LITERATURA. Wallach,Otto (1910). Willstätter, Richard (1915). haber, fritz (1918).
    http://www.euro.mineco.es/guiadidactica/guia4/FCHAU2.htm
    Ficha 2 (a) Listado de PREMIOS NOBEL europeos* Completar el trabajo con los nuevos premios Nobel que se otorguen. ALEMANIA LITERATURA Mommsen, Theodor (1902) Eucken, Rudolf C. (1908) Heyse, Paul (1910) Hauptmann, Gerhart (1912) Mann, Thomas (1929) Sachs, Nelly (1966) Böll, Heinrich (1972) QUIMICA Fischer Emil H. (1902) Baeyer, Adolf von (1905) Buchner, Eduard (1907) Ostwald, Wilhelm (1909) Wallach, Otto (1910) Willstätter, Richard (1915) Haber, Fritz (1918) Nernst, Walther H. (1920) Zsigmondy, Richard (1925) Wieland, Heinrich O. (1927) Windaus, Adolf (1928) Fischer, Hans (1930) Bosch, Carl (1931) Bergius, Friedrich K.R. (1931) Kuhn, Richard (1938) Butenandt, Adolf (1939) Hahn, Otto (1944) Diels, Otto Paul H. (1950) Alder, Kurt (1950) Staudinger, Hermann (1953) Ziegler, Karl (1963) Eigen, Manfred (1967) Fischer Ernst O. (1973) Wittig, Georg (1979) Deisenhofer, Johann (1988) Huber, Robert (1988) Michel, Hartmut (1988) FÍSICA Röntgen, Wilhelm C. (1901) Lenard, Philipp (1905) Braun, Karl F. (1909) Wien, Wilhelm (1911) Laue, Max von (1914) Planck, Max Karl E.L. (1918)

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