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         Rohrer Heinrich:     more detail
  1. Personnalité Saint-Galloise: Emil Jannings, Anna Göldin, Pipilotti Rist, Paul Guldin, Heinrich Rohrer, Michael Von Der Heide, Ernst Rüdin (French Edition)
  2. Scanning Tunneling Microscope: Gerd Binnig, Heinrich Rohrer, IBM, Nobel Prize in Physics, Absolute Zero, Quantum Tunneling
  3. Kommunikation im Beruf by Hans Heinrich Rohrer, 2008
  4. Langenscheidt Vocabulaire de base allemand, Dictionnaire d'apprentissage by Hans-Heinrich Rohrer, 1991-01-01
  5. Die deutsche Königswahl, ihre Rechtsgrundlagen bis zur Goldenen Bulle by Heinrich Mitteis, 1944-01-01
  6. Die deutsche Königswahl. Ihre Rechtsgrundlagen bis zur goldenen Bulle by Heinrich Mitteis, 1954-01-01

41. 30 De Octubre De 1997
Translate this page Así lo aseguró hoy, jueves, heinrich rohrer, Premio nobel de Física 1986, quedurante estos días participa en varias actividades académicas de la Facultad
http://grupos.unican.es/prensa/noticias/301097.html
30 de octubre de 1997
  • Rohrer (Nobel de Física '86): "La tecnología desarrollada a nivel atómico y molecular permitirá emular el funcionamiento del cerebro" Las nuevas tecnologías desarrolladas a nivel molecular y atómico permitirán simular cada vez mejor el funcionamiento del cerebro humano, si bien nunca será posible reproducir la complejidad de sus conexiones neuronales. Así lo aseguró hoy, jueves, Heinrich Rohrer, Premio Nobel de Física 1986, que durante estos días participa en varias actividades académicas de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Universidad de Cantabria. Los científicos están en disposición de obtener valiosa información a escala nanométrica (del tamaño de un átomo), gracias a las nuevas técnicas de observación. Precisamente, la Academia sueca premió a los investigadores Heinrich Rohrer y Gerd Binning, ambos adscritos al Laboratorio de IBM en Rüschlikon (Suiza), por el diseño del microscopio de efecto de túnel de barrido (Scanning Tunnelling Microscope o STM) capaz de realizar observaciones a estos niveles. "Nosotros no buscábamos el diseño de este invento -matiza Rohrer-; fue algo que surgió inesperadamente en el transcurso de una investigación a nivel nanométrico". Rohrer matiza que la invención de este microscopio no sustituye a los que se basan en otros principios y se centran en otras escalas. "El STM es capaz de observar detalles mínimos en puntos muy pequeños y concretos. Acerca al ojo humano un mundo que hasta ahora se nos escapaba, pero sin sustituir a otros microscopios que se basan en otros principios (electrónico, óptico, etc.) y ofrecen información a otras escalas".

42. Physics Nobel Laureates 1975 - Today
The first nobel prize in physics was awarded to Wilhelm rohrer, heinrich, Switzerland,IBM Zürich Research Laboratory, Rüschlikon, Switzerland, * 1933
http://www1.physik.tu-muenchen.de/~gammel/matpack/html/Chronics/physics_laureate
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
(Kungl. Vetenskapsakademien)
Physics 1975
The prize was awarded jointly to: BOHR, AAGE, Denmark, Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, MOTTELSON, BEN, Denmark, Nordita, Copenhagen, * 1926 (in Chicago, U.S.A.); and RAINWATER, JAMES, U.S.A., Columbia University, New York, NY, "for the discovery of the connection between collective motion and particle motion in atomic nuclei and the development of the theory of the structure of the atomic nucleus based on this connection".
Physics 1976
The prize was divided equally between: RICHTER, BURTON, U.S.A., Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, CA, TING, SAMUEL C. C., U.S.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA, (European Center for Nuclear Research, Geneva, Switzerland), "for their pioneering work in the discovery of a heavy elementary particle of a new kind".
Physics 1977
The prize was divided equally between: ANDERSON, PHILIP W., U.S.A., Bell Laboratories,Murray Hill, NJ, MOTT, Sir NEVILL F., Great Britain, Cambridge University, Cambridge

43. Search Results For Heinrich Himmler - Encyclopædia Britannica - The Online Ency
heinrich rohrer The nobel Foundation Brief autobiography of this Switzerlandbornjoint-winner of the nobel Prize in Physics for 1986.
http://search.britannica.com/search?query=heinrich himmler&fuzzy=N&ct=igv&start=

44. Nobel Laureates Related To Switzerland In Science
1984 Carlo Rubbia and Simon van der Meer 1986 heinrich rohrer - 1987 K. AlexanderMüller - 1988 Jack Steinberger - 1992 Georges Charpak nobel Prize in
http://www.eda.admin.ch/tokyo_emb/e/home/scite/chinf/chnob.html
Embassy of Switzerland - Tokyo Search Contact Print English NOBEL LAUREATES RELATED TO SWITZERLAND IN SCIENCE
Nobel Prize in Physics
- 1920 Charles Edouard Guillaume

- 1921 Albert Einstein

- 1952 Felix Bloch

- 1976 Burton Richter
...
- 1992 Georges Charpak

Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- 1913 Alfred Werner

- 1937 Paul Karrer

- 1939 Leopold Ruzicka
- 1975 Vladimir Prelog ... - 1991 Richard R. Ernst Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine - 1909 Emil Theodor Kocher - 1948 Paul Hermann Müller - 1949 Walter Rudolf Hess - 1950 Tadeus Reichstein ... For Swiss Researchers in Japan

45. TOP NANO 21 - Referenten
Dr. rohrer heinrich, nobel laureate, Switzerland, Nanoscience in Switzerland. Prof.Dr. Roco Mihail C. NSTC (NSET), Arlington, USA, Nanotechnologies in USA. Prof.
http://www.temas.ch/nano/nano_homepage.nsf/vwAllByKey/Referenten|de

46. TOP NANO 21 - Speakers
Dr. rohrer heinrich, nobel laurate, Switzerland, Nanoscience in Switzerland. Prof.Dr. Roco Mihail C. NSTC (NSET), Arlington, USA, Nanotechnologies in USA. Prof.
http://www.temas.ch/nano/nano_homepage.nsf/vwAllByKey/Referenten|en
language="en"; dbPath="/NANO/nano_homepage.nsf"; key="Referenten"; You are here: Nano Conference 2003 > Conference Program > Speakers Program Research Companies Education Nano Conference 2003 Events Services
Speakers
Opening and Plenary lectures
Lectures Life Sciences

Lectures Tools and Sensors

Lectures Materials and Surfaces

Lectures Optics and Electronics
...
Outlook Session

The program is constantly updated
Opening and Plenary lectures Prof. Dr. Dekker Cees Delft University of Technology Delft, Netherlands Materials and Surfaces Prof. Dr. Gaub Hermann University of Munich Munich, Germany Life Sciences Prof. Dr. Lieber Charles M Harvard University Cambridge, USA Optics and Electronics Prof. Dr. Maruyama Eiichi Frontier Research System, RIKEN Saitama, Japan Nanotechnologies in Japan Dr. Rohrer Heinrich Nobel laureate Switzerland Nanoscience in Switzerland Prof. Dr. Roco Mihail C. NSTC (NSET) Arlington, USA Nanotechnologies in USA Prof. Dr. Roukes Michael L. Caltech Pasadena, USA Tools and Sensors
Lectures Life Sciences Prof. Dr. Engel Andreas University of Basel Basel, Switzerland

47. Articulo De García Y Rohrer
Translate this page heinrich rohrer, es miembro del Laboratorio y Premio nobel de Física (h.rohrer@fsp.csic.es).ESQUEMA ILUSTRATIVO DEL CAMINO DE LA NANOCIENCIA Y TECNOLOGÍA.
http://www.fsp.csic.es/elmundo/elmundo.htm

48. The Scientist - Nobel Winners Stimulate Research
The nobel Prize in physics was shared by Ernst Ruska of the Fritz Haber of the electronmicroscope, and the team of Gerd Binnig and heinrich rohrer, for their
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1986/nov/grimwade_p4_861117.html
The Scientist 1[2]:4, Nov. 17, 1986
NEWS
Nobel Winners Stimulate Research
By Alexander Grimwade PHILADELPHIA-The Nobel Prizes are not the result of an election among scientists for "best scientist of the year." But practicing scientists do pass judgment of a kind when they cite other scientists' work in their papers or build on that work to move into a new research area. By that yardstick, this year's laureates are worthy recipients of the prizes from the Swedish Academy of Sciences. All the winners have published work that has been highly cited by their peers and which has led to important new areas of research. Stanley Cohen of Vanderbilt University and Rita Levi-Montalcini of the Institute of Cell Biology in Rome jointly received the Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology for their discoveries of growth factors. The technique of citation analysis-recording and analyzing the number of times a particular paper is cited in the literature, and by whom-shows that their work has made a major contribution to several related fields. Levi-Montalcini's work on nerve growth factor dates from the late 1940s and early 1950s. Twenty of her papers have been cited more than 50 times; much of her early work is still regularly referenced. A similar pattern can be found in Co hen's work on epidermal growth factor (see accompanying graph). The papers the two laureates have co-authored, however, are not among their most highly cited work.

49. RTD Info 21 - Blurring The Boundaries At The Atomic Scale
nobel laureate heinrich rohrer Do we really need pentabit devices? This, accordingto IBM Zurich nobel laureate heinrich rohrer, is about time.
http://europa.eu.int/comm/research/rtdinf21/en/dossier1.html
IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTICE - The information on this site is subject to a and a
Nanotechnology
Blurring the Boundaries at the Atomic Scale
Nobel laureate Heinrich Rohrer "Do we really need pentabit devices? Or would we be better off pursuing higher complexity, instead of smaller transistors?" The microelectronics industry's race for miniaturisation is fast approaching the realm of nanotechnology. A new, more multidisciplinary paradigm is required, with major implications for fields as diverse as microelectronics, quantum physics and biology. J ust what is nanotechnology? Pick up a paperback at the next bookshop you visit and you'll read about tiny machines patrolling your blood vessels, constantly repairing the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Other books will warn of the `Star Trek scenario', where rampaging nanomachines turn the planet into grey sludge, or summon up a vision of perfectly built structures - vehicles, or perhaps even spacecraft - emerging like butterflies from a soup of tiny assembling machines, programmed using the industrial equivalent of DNA. But what do the scientists think? "Nanotechnology has often been defined as the science of fabricating, characterising and using structures from the atomic scale up to around 100 nanometres," says Dr Marc Van Rossum, head of Advanced Materials and Nanoelectronics research at IMEC, the Belgian microelectronics R&D institute. "But this definition is simply not much use because it embraces so many fields - from electronics and physics, through biology and chemistry and on to mechanical engineering. And who set this 100 nanometre limit?"

50. Foresight Update 30 Page 1
Foundation began its Distinguished Lecture Series June 16 at its headquarters inArlington, Virginia, with a presentation by nobel Laureate, Dr. heinrich rohrer
http://www.foresight.org/Updates/Update30/Update30.1.html
Home New on this Website Site Map Search ... Foresight Update 30 - Table of Contents

Foresight Update 30
Page 1
A publication of the Foresight Institute Foresight Update 30 - Table of Contents
Physics Nobel Laureate Briefs
National Science Foundation on Nanotechnology
by Richard H. Smith, II
The National Science Foundation began its Distinguished Lecture Series June 16 at its headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, with a presentation by Nobel Laureate, Dr. Heinrich Rohrer . In the words of Ken Chong , NSF Director for Structural Systems, Construction Processes, Mechanics and Materials, this series of lectures was designed to "provide cross-fertilization and to convey different ideas." Bert Marsh, Acting Assistant Director for Engineering, introduced Dr. Rohrer, stating that "all of us are interested in the new field of nanotechnology." In the standing-room only audience were over 125 interested participants, most wearing NSF name badges.
When the talk was advertised, the official title was "The Nanometer Age, Challenges and Choices," but Dr. Rohrer said he should have called it "Nanotechnology - Nature's Way." The abstract read as follows: "The more conventional aspect of science and technology on the nanometer (nm) scale is seen in advancing observation and precision standards down to the atomic level and in continued miniaturization from today's microtechnology to tomorrow's nanotechnology. There is lots of room at the bottom of the scale, even now, 35 years after

51. Foresight Update 29 Page 2
nobel Laureate Eyes Nanoscale Manufacturing In New Engineering Lecture Series nobelLaureate heinrich rohrer, inventor of the scanning tunneling microscope
http://www.foresight.org/Updates/Update29/Update29.2.html
Home New on this Website Site Map Search ... Foresight Update 29 - Table of Contents

Foresight Update 29
Page 2
A publication of the Foresight Institute Foresight Update 29 - Table of Contents
Inside Foresight: Paradigm Shift in Progress
by Chris Peterson
As this issue of Update goes to press, we've received a June 4 media advisory from the National Science Foundation, forwarded by Senior Associate Richard Smith, about a lecture on June 16: Nobel Laureate Eyes Nanoscale Manufacturing
In New Engineering Lecture Series
Nobel Laureate Heinrich Rohrer, inventor of the scanning tunneling microscope, will inaugurate a new National Science Foundation engineering lecture series with a talk titled "The Nanometer Age: Challenges and Chances."
Rohrer will discuss recent advances in precision nanoscale science and technology, which will permit building things molecule by molecule and heralding a class of made-to-order materials with streamlined structures and properties. Ultra precise medical instruments could permit surgeons to operate on individual cells. Materials dozens of times stronger than steel of the same weight could be produced. The ability to manipulate molecules would greatly contribute to an emerging field of science that explores how to arrange conditions so that atoms spontaneously assemble into specific molecular structures.
Rohrer and Gerd Binnig received the King Faisal Prize and the Hewlett Packard Europhysics Prize in 1984, and the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1986. Rohrer was inducted into the US National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1994. He joined IBM's Zurich research laboratory in 1963.

52. NOBEL Per La FISICA
Translate this page nobel per la FISICA Solvay 1927 1901. Röentgen, Wilhelm C. (Germania). 1902. 1986.Binnig, Gerd (RFT). rohrer, heinrich (Svizzera). Ruska, Ernst (RFT). 1987.
http://digilander.libero.it/andreawentura/fisica/nobel.htm
NOBEL per la FISICA Solvay 1927 Röentgen, Wilhelm C. (Germania) Lorentz, Hendrik A. (Paesi Bassi) Zeeman, Pieter (Paesi Bassi) Curie, Pierre (Francia) Curie, Marie (Francia) Becquerel, Antoine H. (Francia) Rayleigh, John W. (Gran Bretagna) Lenard, Philipp (Germania) Thomson, Joseph John (Gran Bretagna) Michelson, Albert A. (USA) Lippmann, Gabriel (Francia) Marconi, Guglielmo (Italia) Braun, Karl F. (Germania) Waals, Johannes D. van der (Paesi Bassi) Wien, Wilhelm (Germania) Dalén, Nils Gustaf (Svezia) Kamerlingh Onnes, Heike (Paesi Bassi) Laue, Max von (Germania) Bragg, William H. (Gran Bretagna) Bragg, William L. (Gran Bretagna) Non assegnato Barkla, Charles G. (Gran Bretagna) Planck, Max Karl E.L. (Germania) Stark, Johannes (Germania) Guillaume, Charles E. (Francia) Einstein, Albert (USA) Bohr, Niels Henrik D. (Danimarca) Millikan, Robert A. (USA) Siegbahn, Karl M.G. (Svezia) Franck, James (Germania) Herz, Gustav (Germania)

53. Ëàóðåàòû Íîáåëåâñêèõ ïðåìèé ïî ôèçèêå
Alphabetical listing of nobel prize laureates in Physics. Name. Year Awarded. Roentgen,Wilhelm Conrad, 1901. rohrer, heinrich, 1986. Rubbia, Carlo, 1984.
http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_ph.htm
PHYSICS
Alphabetical listing of Nobel prize laureates in Physics
Name Year Awarded Alfven, Hannes Alvarez, Luis W. Anderson, Carl David Anderson, Philip W. Appleton, Sir Edward Victor Bardeen, John Bardeen, John Barkla, Charles Glover Basov, Nicolay Gennadiyevich Becquerel, Antoine Henri Bednorz, J. Georg Bethe, Hans Albrecht Binnig, Gerd Blackett, Lord Patrick Maynard Stuart Bloch, Felix Bloembergen, Nicolaas Bohr, Aage Bohr, Niels Born, Max Bothe, Walther Bragg, Sir William Henry Bragg, Sir William Lawrence Brattain, Walter Houser Braun, Carl Ferdinand Bridgman, Percy Williams Brockhouse, Bertram N. Chadwick, Sir James Chamberlain, Owen Chandrasekhar, Subramanyan Charpak, Georges Cherenkov, Pavel Alekseyevich Chu, Steven Cockcroft, Sir John Douglas Cohen-Tannoudji, Claude Compton, Arthur Holly Cooper, Leon N. Curie, Marie Curie, Pierre Dalen, Nils Gustaf Davisson, Clinton Joseph De Broglie, Prince Louis-Victor De Gennes, Pierre-Gilles Dehmelt, Hans G.

54. Wkforum
Asia Pacific. rohrer, heinrich nobel Laureate in Physics, Consejo Superiorde Investigaciones Cientificas, Spain. Shea, William Strategic
http://www.wkforum.org/wkf_eng/wkf_eng_forum/speaker/2001/09/05/307,999669935,72
www.wkforum.org HOME Bulletin Registration Contact US ... SiteMap About the WKF Why WKF? Steering Committee Secretariat Partnership ... Benefits of Participation WKF 2002 Opening Address Program Overview Speakers Special Sessions ... Press Release WKF 2001 Program Overview Speakers Special Sessions Plenary Sessions ... Breakout Sessions WKF 2000 Program Overview Speakers Special Sessions Plenary Sessions ... WKF2000 VOD Partners FAQs KIOSK for Registrants Log-in My Schedule Participants Search Check Message KIOSK for Speakers Log-in My Schedule Participants Search Check Message
Speakers
Bronkhorst, Eelko
Kim, Won Lehner, Urban C. Miller, Lee
Editor at large Asia-Pacific, Bloomberg Park, Jong-Soo CEO, Daewoo Securities Romer, Paul M. Dean Witter Foundation Senior Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, STANCO 25 Professor of Economics in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University Abdul Rahim, Rinalia Policy Technologist, National Information Technology Council, Malaysia Andersson, Thomas

55. Deutsches Museum - Masterpieces - The Scanning Tunnelling Microscope
One year later, Gerd Binning and heinrich rohrer of IBM's Zurich Research Laboratorywere awarded the nobel Prize in physics for their pioneering work.
http://www.deutsches-museum.de/ausstell/meister/e_rtm.htm
The scanning tunnelling microscope
by Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer
in the Physics department
A new method of "visualising" atoms The scanning tunnelling microscope (STM)
larger photo 59 kB
Optical microscopes reach their limit at a resolution of approximately 250 nanometres (1 nanometre = 1 nm = 1 millionth of a millimetre). This corresponds roughly to half the wavelength of visible light. With an electron microscope, this limit can be overcome, since electrons have shorter wavelengths than light. In certain materials, a modern electron microscope is even able to visualise atomic structures of subnanometre dimensions. Under certain conditions it is also possible to depict surfaces at the atomic scale by employing methods that use X-rays or electron diffraction. However, none of these methods is as simple and as non-invasive as scanning tunnelling microscopy. The scanning tunnelling microscope does not "see" the atoms, but "feels" them. An ultra-fine tip scans a surface at a constant interval of just a few atomic widths. The control of the distance between the tip and the surface is constantly checked by means of the so-called "tunnelling current". This flows between the tip and the target when a voltage is applied between them. The tunnelling current can only be explained by means of quantum mechanics. This STM image from IBM's Zurich Research Laboratory shows the transition from gallium arsenide (above, left) to the "rougher" aluminium gallium arsenide (below, right) with a resolution at the atomic scale. The three bright elevations that are clearly recognisable are individual oxygen atoms.

56. June In Chemistry
Prize (Medicine), 1992. heinrich rohrer born 1933 scanning tunnelingmicroscope; nobel Prize (Physics), 1986; Pure Food and Drug
http://webserver.lemoyne.edu/faculty/giunta/June.html
June in Chemistry
Links in these month-by-month files are revised only yearly, when the events are posted on This Week in the History of Chemistry . Click here to view principal sources. June 1 June 2 June 3 June 4 June 5

57. Nobel Prize Winners : Physics
nobel Prize Winners in Physics. Year, Article, Country*, Achievement. rohrer,heinrich, Switzerland, development of special electron microscopes.
http://www.emsb.qc.ca/laurenhill/science/nobelph.html
Nobel Prize Winners in Physics
Year Article Country* Achievement Röntgen, Wilhelm Conrad Germany discovery of X rays Lorentz, Hendrik Antoon The Netherlands investigation of the influence of magnetism on radiation Zeeman, Pieter The Netherlands investigation of the influence of magnetism on radiation Becquerel, Henri France discovery of spontaneous radioactivity Curie, Marie France investigations of radiation phenomena discovered by Becquerel Curie, Pierre France investigations of radiation phenomena discovered by Becquerel Rayleigh (of Terling Place), John William Strutt, 3rd Baron U.K. discovery of argon Lenard, Philipp Germany research on cathode rays Thomson, Sir J.J. U.K. researches into electrical conductivity of gases Michelson, A.A. U.S. spectroscopic and metrological investigations Lippmann, Gabriel France photographic reproduction of colours Braun, Ferdinand Germany development of wireless telegraphy Marconi, Guglielmo Italy development of wireless telegraphy Waals, Johannes Diederik van der The Netherlands research concerning the equation of state of gases and liquids Wien, Wilhelm

58. NTNU - Norges Teknisk Naturvitenskapelige Universitet
Nobelprisvinnerne som besøkte NTNU var Gerardus 't Hooft, heinrich rohrer,Christiane NüssleinVolhard, Daniel Carleton Gajdusek, og Morten Rostrup.
http://www.ntnu.no/nobel/
Det Norske Nobelinstitutt Nobel e-Museum
Gerardus 't Hooft Heinrich Rohrer ... Daniel Carleton Gajdusek , og Morten Rostrup Windows Media Player versjon 7
Sendingen er produsert av NTNU videre
Ansvarlig redaktør: Informasjonsdirektør NTNU, Kontakt: www-admin@www.ntnu.no

59. IBM Taiwan - ¥xÆW¤½¥q¥DºÞ¤¶²Ð
. . . . Leo Esaki nobel Winner1973; Gerd K Binnig nobel Winner 1986; heinrich rohrer nobel Winner 1986;
http://www-901.ibm.com/tw/press/bio/nobel_prize.html
Taiwan ­Ó¤H±M°Ï IBM ¨ä¥L°ê®a ·s»D«Ç ·s»DÀÉ®× ... ¥xÆW¤½¥q¥DºÞ¤¶²Ð ¡E ¿Õ¨©º¸±o¥D¤¶²Ð IBM ²¤¶ Ápµ¸§Ú­Ì ¬Ûö³sµ²¡G ³Ì·s®ø®§ ¤½ö©u¥Z ¬¡°Ê§Ö°T
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60. Chemistry - Links For Chemists - Topics - Biographies
Links to biographies of over 200 people who have advanced and refined the field of chemistry. A section Category Science Chemistry History...... Bernhard SE; nobel, Alfred Bernhard @ Bilkent TR; nobel, Alfred Bernhard rohrer, heinrich;Rumford, Count (see Thompson, Benjamin); Ruska, Ernst; Rutherford, Daniel;
http://www.liv.ac.uk/Chemistry/Links/refbiog.html
Links for Chemists
Chemistry section of the WWW Virtual Library
Virtual Library
Science Chemistry : Biographies of Famous Chemists
Unless otherwise stated, the biographies listed below are provided and listed with the kind permission of the The Nobel Foundation . If you know of any biographies of Chemists or scientists whose work has advanced chemistry, that we do not list, please inform us via our comments form
  • Alder, Kurt
      US @ St. Andrews UK
    Anfinsen, Christian B Arrhenius, Svante August Arfwedson, Johan August Astbury, William T. @ Leeds UK Aston, Francis William Avogadro, Lorenzo Romano AMADEO Carlo, comte de Quaregna et de Ceretto Baekeland, Leo Hendrik @ Time Magazine US von Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Barton, Sir Derek Harold Richard Balmer, Johann Jakob @ St Andrews UK Beckman, Arnold Orville IL Beer, August Bequerel, Henri Antoine
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