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         Kroto Sir Harold W:     more detail

21. Winning The 1996 Nobel Prize For Chemistry
award the 1996 nobel Prize in Chemistry jointly to Professor Robert F. Curl, Jr.,Rice University, Houston, USA,; Professor sir harold W. kroto, University of
http://www.slb.com/seed/en/watch/fullerenes/prize.htm
Science Watch Science Lab Meet the Experts Careers SEED Journal Teacher's Corner About the Science Center Contact SEED SEED Home ... Connectivity Grant Program The Discovery Of Fullerenes
Winning The 1996 Nobel Prize For Chemistry
...as told by Jonathan Hare In December 1996 I was lucky to be part of the Sussex group which accompanied Harry Kroto to Sweden for the awarding of the Nobel Prize for chemistry. This is my account of the historic event. The Kroto Contingent
Back (left to right)
Jim Heath
Dr. Sean O'Brian***
Steve Kroto
Prof. Danko Bosanac**
Prof. Reg Colin*
Dr. Jonathan Hare
Front (left to right)
Dr. David Walton
Carol Walton
Prof. Sir Harry Kroto
Margaret Kroto Claudia Colin**
* University Libre de Bruxelles ** Rudjer Bofkovic, Institute Sagre

22. Prix Nobel De Chimie 1996
sir harold W. kroto,Université du Sciences, une voix gentille, mais sobre, informe sir Harry qu
http://www.slb.com/seed/fr/watch/fullerenes/prize.htm
Prix Nobel de Chimie 1996 ... ...Jonathan Hare raconte Le groupe accompagnant Kroto
Jim Heath
Dr. Sean O'Brian***
Steve Kroto
Prof. Danko Bosanac**
Prof. Reg Colin*
Dr. Jonathan Hare Dr. David Walton
Carol Walton
Prof. Sir Harry Kroto
Margaret Kroto
Claudia Colin**

** Rudjer Bofkovic, Institute Sagre *** Texas, Etats-Unis
Le lieu
LE Voici ce que nous avons lu sur Internet :
  • Appels, fax et interviews
Avec l'aimable autorisation de Jonathan Hare et de son institut Creative Science Centre pour la publication de toutes les photos. DEBUT DE LA RECHERCHE LA DECOUVERTE DES FULLERENES UNE AVANCEE CAPITALE LA SPECTROSCOPIE PRIX NOBEL 1996 LE PLUS PETIT FULLERENE REPONSE A UN MYSTERE DE LA TERRE LIENS PROJETS ASSOCIES ... BLOC-NOTES DU PROF Pour en savoir plus Si vous avez une nouvelle question

23. Nobel Prize In Chemistry 1996
award the 1996 nobel Prize in Chemistry jointly to Professor Robert F. Curl, Jr.,Rice University, Houston, USA, Professor sir harold W. kroto, University of
http://felix.unife.it/Root/d-General/d-Chemistry/d-The-chemist/t-Nobel-prize-che
Nobel prize in chemistry 1996 From nobelsrv@www.nobel.ki.seWed Oct 9 19:00:59 1996 Date: Wed, 9 Oct 1996 15:37:04 +0100 From: Nobel Foundation WWW Server

24. Kémiai Nobel-díjak, 1996
Prof. sir harold W. kroto, Prof. Richard E. Smalley. Rice University, Texas, USA,University of Sussex, Brighton, UK, Rice University, Texas, USA. A nobeldíjat a
http://www.kfki.hu/~cheminfo/hun/olvaso/nobel96/nobel.html
Prof. Robert F. Curl, Jr Prof. Sir Harold W. Kroto Prof. Richard E. Smalley Rice University,
Texas, USA University of Sussex,
Brighton, U.K. Rice University,
Texas, USA
http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1996/index.html

kapta a
Helium Three
Physics Today,

ChemoNet, 1996/10/12

25. Nanotechnology - Interview With Dr. Richard Smalley
Dr. Smalley received the nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1996, along with Dr. RobertF. Curl, Jr. and sir harold W. kroto, for the discovery of fullerenes.
http://www.esi-topics.com/nano/interviews/Richard-Smalley.html
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An INTERVIEW with Dr. Richard Smalley ESI Special Topics, March 2002
Citing URL - http://www.esi-topics.com/nano/interviews/ Richard-Smalley.html n December 2001, ESI Special Topics correspondent Gary Taubes talked with Dr. Richard Smalley of Rice University about his highly cited work in nanotechnology. Dr. Smalley’s work has garnered 3,816 total citations for 78 papers, making him the most-cited scientist in our analysis of nanotechnology research in the past decade. In addition, Dr. Smalley has an impressive citation record in the ISI Essential Science Indicators Web product, with over 2,000 citations each in both Physics and Chemistry, and over 4,500 citations in the Multidisciplinary field. Dr. Smalley is the Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Physics at Rice, as well as the Director of the . Dr. Smalley received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1996, along with Dr. Robert F. Curl, Jr. and Sir Harold W. Kroto, for the discovery of fullerenes.

26. Click Here
Click Here. nobel Prize Winners. Chemistry. YEAR, WINNER. 1996, Curl,Robert F., Jr. (US) kroto, sir harold W. (UK) Smalley, Richard E. (US).
http://www.freegk.com/nobel/chemistry.php
Nobel Prize Winners
Chemistry
YEAR WINNER Van't Hoff, Jacobus H. (Neth) Fischer, Emil H. (Ger) Arrhenius, Svante A. (Sw) Ramsay, Sir William (UK) ... Willstätter, Richard (Ger) Not awarded Not awarded Haber, Fritz (Ger) Nernst, Walther H. (Ger) Soddy, Frederick (UK) Aston, Francis W. (UK) ... Pregl, Fritz (Aust) Not Awarded Zsigmondy, Richard (Ger) Svedberg, Theodor (Sw) Wieland, Heinrich O. (Ger) Windaus, Adolf (Ger) ... Langmuir, Irving (US) Not Awarded Urey, Harold C. (US) Joliot-Curie, Irene(Fr)
Joliot-Curie, Frédéric (Fr)
Debye, Peter Joseph W. (Neth) ...
Ruzicka, Leopold (Switz)
Not awarded Not awarded Not awarded Hevesy, Georg de (Hung) Hahn, Otto (Ger) Virtanen, Artturi I. (Fin) Sumner, James B. (US) ... Back
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27. Nobel Prize Winners In Chemistry Since1901
Dorothy C. Hodgkin. nobel Prize Winners in Chemistry 19011999. 1996 - Robert F.Curl, Jr. sir harold W. kroto; Richard E. Smalley. 1995 - Paul Crutzen,.
http://iweb.tntech.edu/chem491-dc/prizewinners.htm
Excluded Subjects for Fall 2000
ROBERT S. MULLIKEN Sidney Altman Ernest Rutherford Sherwood Roland Willard Frank Libby George Wittig Frederick Sanger VINCENT DU VIGNEAUD Kary Mullis William Ramsay Alexander Todd Irving Langmuir Hermann Staudinger Vlademir Prelog Jerome Karle Adolf Butenandts Theodore William Richards Melvin Calvin Gertrude B. Elion Marie Curie Dorothy C. Hodgkin
Nobel Prize Winners in Chemistry 1901-1999
1999 - The prize was awarded for studies of the transition states of chemical reactions using femtosecond spectrscopy.
  • AHMED ZEWAIL
- The prize was awarded for pioneering contributions in developing methods that can be used for theoretical studies of the properties of molecules and the chemical processes in which they are involved. The prize was divided equally between:
  • WALTER KOHN for his development of the density-functional theory and JOHN A. POPLE for his development of computational methods in quantum chemistry.
- The prize was divided, one half being awarded jointly to:

28. Sir Harold W. Kroto: Awards Won By Sir Harold W. Kroto
123Awards hardwork is paid in form of awards. Awards of sir harold W. kroto.OTHERnobel, 1996, CHEMISTRY. Enter Artist/Album. Partner Sites. Stardose.com.
http://www.123awards.com/artist/3236.asp
hardwork is paid in form of awards Awards of Sir Harold W. Kroto OTHER-NOBEL CHEMISTRY Enter Artist/Album
Partner Sites
Stardose.com RealLyrics.com OnlyHitLyrics.com Biography Search Engine ... privacy

29. Fullerenes
the 1996 nobel Prize in Chemistry jointly to. Professor Robert F. Curl,Jr. Professor sir harold W. kroto Professor Richard E. Smalley.
http://www.enscp.jussieu.fr/pub/fullerenes/
Carbon won the
1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Above : The earth is imprisonned in a Fullerene. Right : You are in the Fullerene and look outside. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry jointly to Professor Robert F. Curl, Jr.
Professor Sir Harold W. Kroto
Professor Richard E. Smalley
for their discovery of fullerenes. Quick-Time VR 156 Ko.
Requires Apple's QuickTime Plug-In. Some more links Curl, Kroto and Smalley,
clockwise, starting from top Robert F. Curl Home Page (rice.edu)
Harold W. Kroto Home Page (susx.ac.uk)

Richard E. Smalley Home Page (rice.edu)
The Buckminster Fuller Institute ...
Fullerene group (Vienna.at)

Updated October 18, 1996
http://www.enscp.jussieu.fr/pub/fullerenes/ Comments : cense@ext.jussieu.fr (Jean-Michel CENSE)

30. The Scientist - Harold Kroto Contemplates Applications Of Nobel-Winning Fulleren
Editor's Note Last month, sir harold kroto, the Royal Society called the moleculebuckminsterfullerene (HW kroto et al 60 in bulk quantities (W. Kratschmer et
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1997/jan/research_970106.html
The Scientist 11[1]:14, Jan. 06, 1997
Research
Harold Kroto Contemplates Applications of Nobel-Winning Fullerenes
By None Editor's Note: Last month, Sir Harold Kroto, the Royal Society Research Professor at the University of Sussex in Brighton, U.K., along with Richard E. Smalley, the Hackerman Professor of Chemistry at Rice University and Robert F. Curl, Jr., also a professor of chemistry at Rice, received the Nobel Prize in chemistry in Stockholm. They were honored for their discovery of buckyballs, the now-famous soccer-ball-shaped molecules named for architect R. Buckminster Fuller and his geodesic domes. The 60-carbon-atom molecules are also called fullerenes. Since the discovery of C almost 12 years ago, "buckyballs" have captured the imagination of scientists and the public alike. At first the existence of buckyballs drew much skepticism, but over the last decade they have grown into a flourishing area of research. Few stories in the annals of contemporary science provide a stronger argument for pursuing fundamental research than the discovery of C . In the early 1970s, Kroto hatched a research program at the University of Sussex to seek long chains of carbon in interstellar space. During 1975-78 this effort eventually led to the detection of several different carbon chains, including HC

31. The Scientist - Reflections From Nobel Conference XXXVII
As he spoke those words, nobel laureate sir harold W. kroto stood before acrowd of some 5,000 people gathered at Gustavus Adolphus College in St.
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr2001/nov/rayl_p12_011112.html
The Scientist 15[22]:12, Nov. 12, 2001
NEWS
Reflections from Nobel Conference XXXVII
Laureates offer perspective on recent events and scientist's roles in the future
E-mail
article
By A.J.S. Rayl
"The problems of the future are, I believe, very serious-and I'm not as optimistic as I used to be. You see, I am a child of the sixties who had the great fortune to grow up so optimistic." As he spoke those words, Nobel laureate Sir Harold W. Kroto stood before a crowd of some 5,000 people gathered at Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, Minn., for the 37th annual Nobel Conference. This year's meeting was a special one, celebrating of the 100th anniversary of the Nobel Prizes. The college had commissioned a symphony from Emmy-Award-winning composer Steve Heitzeg , and two special banquets were being prepared. One dinner would replicate the first Nobel Prize dinner served in 1901 in Stockholm, complete with a string quartet, Swedish toasts, dancers, and almost exactly the same four-course meal. The centerpiece of the conference-the presentations-were intended to be focused on the future. When Kroto (1996, chemistry), the opening speaker, paused, a silence descended on the hall. The future had looked challenging enough in the months preceding the conference, with scientists concerned about global warming, the loss of biodiversity, polluted oceans and waterways, inadequate food supplies, a growing global population, and an ever-increasing demand for energy. Kroto's hesitation seemed to strike a chord, especially with the other 'children of the sixties' in the audience-the generation that vowed to change the world for the better, the last generation to welcome the future with unbridled hope. But that was then.

32. FSU Press Release
TEACH NANOSCIENCE AT FSU TALLAHASSEE, Fla.Florida State University administratorshave announced that sir harold W. kroto, winner of the 1996 nobel Prize for
http://www.fsu.edu/~unicomm/pages/releases/2002_12/release_2002_12_16a.html
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Dean Donald Foss
dfoss@mailer.fsu.edu

By Jeffery Seay
December 2002
NOBEL-WINNING CHEMIST TO TEACH NANOSCIENCE AT FSU
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Florida State University administrators have announced that Sir Harold W. Kroto, winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, will be teaching at FSU during the spring term of 2004.
Kroto is a chemistry professor at Sussex University in Brighton, United Kingdom, where he studies nanoscience, the creation and study of intricately constructed complex molecules, and nanotechnology, the strategic application of new advances in the area of nanoscience.
Kroto is president of the Royal Society of Chemistry and is the co-founder of the Vega Science Trust. Established in 1994, the trust's mission is to create a broadcast platform for the science, engineering and technology (SET) communities, to enable them to better communicate the aspects of their fields of expertise using TV and the Internet.
"Professor Kroto's work stimulated an entire new branch of chemistry, one that likely will lead to amazing new applications, including new materials that will shape our world at both large and small scales," said Donald Foss, dean of the FSU College of Arts and Sciences. "He also has an interest in science education for young and old, and is himself a terrific speaker and teacher. We are delighted that he will be on our campus next spring."
Foss said that he hopes the relation between FSU and Kroto will develop into a continuing one.

33. FSU Press Release
2002 nobelWINNING CHEMIST WILL VISIT FSU TO DISCUSS NANOSCIENCE TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Thewinner of the 1996 nobel Prize for sir harold W. kroto, a chemistry
http://www.fsu.edu/~unicomm/pages/releases/2002_09/release_2002_09_09a.html
Close Window CONTACT:
Dean Donald Foss
By Jeffery Seay
September 2002
NOBEL-WINNING CHEMIST WILL VISIT FSU TO DISCUSS NANOSCIENCE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-The winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry who is known for his nanoscale materials research will speak at a colloquium in his honor at Florida State University Sept. 23.
Sir Harold W. Kroto, a chemistry professor at Sussex University in Brighton, United Kingdom, will give the lecture "2010, NanoSpace Odyssey" at 1:30 p.m. in the Everglades Auditorium of the Turnbull Center.
At Sussex University, Kroto conducts research at the Sussex Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Centre. He studies nanoscience, the creation and study of intricately constructed complex molecules, and nanotechnology, the strategic application of new advances in the area of nanoscience.
Kroto is president-elect of the Royal Society of Chemistry and is the co-founder of the Vega Science Trust. Established in 1994, the trust's mission is to create a broadcast platform for the science, engineering and technology (SET) communities, to enable them to better communicate the aspects of their fields of expertise using TV and the Internet.
Along with Robert F. Curl Jr. and Richard E. Smalley, Kroto won the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for the discovery of fullerenes, which are cagelike, hollow molecules made up of hexagonal and pentagonal groups of atoms that constitute a third form of carbon after diamond and graphite.

34. Instituto Nicolás Cabrera/ CICLO DE CONFERENCIAS LA FISICA EN
sir harold W. kroto, Premio nobel de Química 1996. University of Sussex.
http://www.inc.uam.es/physics21/main_e.html

35. Instituto Nicolás Cabrera/ Symposium La Física En Los Albores
Monday, 26th 16,00 h. Starting session. 16,30 h. Arquitecture of the microcosmos .sir harold W. kroto, Premio nobel de Química 1996. University of Sussex.
http://www.inc.uam.es/physics21/imain_e.html

36. Pictures Of Nobel Laureates - Chemistry
1973 Ernst Otto Fischer; 1973 - Geoffrey Wilkinson; 1974 - Paul J. Flory; 1975- sir John Cornforth; 1996 - harold W. kroto; 1996 - Robert F. Curl, Jr.
http://chemistry.about.com/library/blchemists.htm
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Index of Pictures - Nobel Laureates in Chemistry This is an index of photographs of the winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

37. Alfred B. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry - Winners
1975, sir John Cornforth Vladimir Prelog, Australia Great Britain Yugoslavia -Switzerland, Stereochemistry of enzyme catalysis 1996, harold W. kroto Robert F
http://chemistry.about.com/library/weekly/aa120202a.htm
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Nobel Prizes in Chemistry List of Winners Related Resources Photos of Nobel Prize Winners
Chemistry History

Chemistry News

Adventures in the Atomic Age - Glenn Seaborg
...
Periodic Table
From Other Guides Nobel Prize Winners - Women Alfred B. Nobel's Will The First Nobel Prizes The Nobel Prize Winners Elsewhere on the Web Nobel Foundation Official Website Biographical Information - Alfred Nobel Here is the list of the Nobel laureates in Chemistry: Year Laureate Country Research Jacobus H. van't Hoff Netherlands Discovered laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions Hermann Emil Fischer Germany Synthetic studies of sugar and purine groups Svante A. Arrhenius

38. GK- National Network Of Education
Crutzen, Paul, 1995. Molina, Mario, 1995. Rowland, F. Sherwood, 1995. kroto,sir harold W. 1996. Smalley, Richard E. 1996. Curl, Robert F., Jr. 1996.
http://www.indiaeducation.info/infomine/nobel/nobelarchive.htm
Associated Agencies Booker Prize Winners International Awards World Nations: Famous Industrial Town ... Nobel Prize Winners Nobel Prize Winners
Chemistry
Literature Medicine Peace ... Economics
Chemistry Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't Fischer, Hermann Emil Arrhenius, Svante August Ramsay, Sir William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Von Moissan, Henri Buchner, Eduard Rutherford, Lord Ernest Ostwald, Wilhelm Wallach, Otto Curie, Marie Sabatier, Paul Grignard, Victor Werner, Alfred Richards, Theodore William

39. Premio Nobel De Química 2000 - Diario De Yucatán
sir harold W. kroto. Richard E. Smalley. 1995. Paul J. Crutzen,
http://www.yucatan.com.mx/especiales/nobel2000/quimica.asp
Premios Nóbel 2000
El Premio Nóbel en Química
La Química es una de las cinco áreas que menciona Alfred Nóbel en su testamento. Este premio deberá ser dado a "quien haya realizado el mejor descubrimiento o mejoramiento químico". La Academia Real Sueca de Ciencias es la encargada de elegir al ganador anual.
Ganadores 1981 - 1999 Ahmed H. Zewail "por sus estudios en la transición de estados de las reacciones químicas utilizando un espectroscopio femtosegundo"
Walter Kohn
"por su desarrollo de la teoría densidad-funcional"
John A. Pople
"por su desarrollo de métodos computacionales en química cuántica"
Paul D. Boyer
"por su explicación del mecanismo enzimático que yace bajo la síntesis de la adenosina trifosfato (ATP)"
John E. Walker

40. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
A listing of nobel Prize winners in chemistry from 1901 to 1999.Category Science Chemistry History......nobel Prizes in Chemistry. Deutsche Version; nobel Prize for Chemistry (with pictures). (USA, *1933) sir harold W. kroto (United Kingdom, *1939) Richard E
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

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