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         Svedberg The:     more books (85)
  1. The Svedberg 1884 - 1944 by Arne, et al., eds. Tiselius, 1944
  2. SVEDBERGS I DALSTORP AB: Labor Productivity Benchmarks and International Gap Analysis
  3. Jesper Svedbergs Life Och Verksamhet (1885) (Swedish Edition) by Henry William Tottie, 2010-09-10
  4. SVEDBERGS I DALSTORP AB: International Competitive Benchmarks and Financial Gap Analysis
  5. Svedberg 1884 1944 by Arne Tiselius, 1945-01-01
  6. Biography - Svedberg, Theodor (1884-1971): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2003-01-01
  7. Ribosomal RNA: Ribosome, Messenger RNA, Amino Acid, Transfer RNA, Peptidyl Transferase, Eukaryote, Svedberg
  8. Jesper Svedbergs Life Och Verksamhet (1885) (Spanish Edition) by Henry William Tottie, 2009-08-10
  9. People From Hälsingland: Set Persson, Per Svedberg, Björn Haugan
  10. The Svedberg, 1884-1944: Contributions to The Svedberg on the occasion of his 60th birthday by Arne Tiselius, 1944
  11. Svedberg, Theodor: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Chemistry: Foundations and Applications</i> by Lawrence H. Brannigan, 2004
  12. The Svedberg 1884-1944. by Arne, et al., eds. Tiselius, 1944
  13. Unité de Temps: Seconde, Siècle, Décennie, Mois, Millénaire, Jour Julien, Jour Sidéral, Svedberg, Quinquennat, Heure, Septennat, Saison, Année (French Edition)
  14. Athlète Suédoise: Carolina Klüft, Kajsa Bergqvist, Susanna Kallur, Ludmila Engquist, Emma Green, Jenny Kallur, Ruth Svedberg (French Edition)

21. SVEDBERG THEODOR (1884-1971)
Translate this page extrêmement féconde pour déterminer les masses molaires des polymèressynthétiques. svedberg reçoit le prix nobel de chimie en 1926.
http://histoirechimie.free.fr/Lien/SVEDBERG.htm
SVEDBERG THEODOR (1884-1971)

22. The Svedberg Laboratory
The(odor) svedberg (18841971) professor in physical chemistry at Uppsala Universityfrom 1912 to 1949 , was awarded the nobel Prize in chemistry in 1926 for
http://www4.tsl.uu.se/tsl/tsl/history.htm
The Svedberg Laboratory
The(odor) Svedberg (1884-1971) professor in physical chemistry at Uppsala University from 1912 to 1949 , was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1926 for his research on dispersed systems (colloidal solutions). He invented the ultracentrifuge, which was used in the discovery that proteins consist of macromolecules.
Towards the end of the 1930's The Svedberg and his colleagues built their first accelerator, a neutron generator. In 1945, a donation from the Gustaf Werner Corporation gave the opportunity to build a much larger accelerator, a synchrocyclotron. The Gustaf Werner Institute with the synchrocyclotron as the main research instrument was founded in 1949 and continued to act as a base for research in high-energy physics and radiation biology until 1986 when The Svedberg Laboratory was established.
Intensive discussions concerning the type and size of accelerators Swedish research in nuclear and high-energy physics should have at its disposal took place in early 1980's, One result of this process was that a decision was taken to bring the magnets of the so-called ICE-ring (Initial Cooling Experiment) from CERN to Uppsala. The accelerator ring was rebuilt as a cooler and storage ring and given the acronym CELSIUS (Cooling with ELectrons and Storing of Ions from the Uppsala Synchrocyclotron).

23. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
http//www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/. nobel PRIZE CHEMISTRY. YEAR. NAMES OF SCIENTISTS.NATIONALITY. TYPE OF CHEMISTRY. physical. 1926. Theodor svedberg. Swedish. physical.
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

24. Guardian Century | 1920-1929 | The Nobel Awards
at the University of Gottingen, and the Prize for Chemistry for 1926 has been awardedto Professor svedberg, of the University of Upsala. Each nobel Prize for
http://www.guardiancentury.co.uk/1920-1929/Story/0,6051,126689,00.html
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The Nobel awards

Literature prize for Mr Shaw
Friday November 12, 1926
The Swedish Academy has awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature for 1925 to Mr. Bernard Shaw, the award of the Prize for Literature for 1926 has been postponed to next year. The 1925 Novel Prize for Physics has been divided between Professor J. Franck, of Gottingen, and Professor G. Hertz, of Halle. The Academy has awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics for 1926 to Professor Jean Perrin of the Sorbonne. The Prize for Chemistry for 1925 has been awarded to Herr Richard Zsigmondy, the Professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of Gottingen, and the Prize for Chemistry for 1926 has been awarded to Professor Svedberg, of the University of Upsala. Each Nobel Prize for 1925 amounts to 118,000 Swedish kroner (about ?6,500).

25. Alfred B. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry - Winners
Here is the list of the nobel laureates in Chemistry Year, Laureate, Country,Research. 1926, Theodor svedberg, Sweden, Disperse systems (ultracentrifuge).
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

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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

26. Pictures Of Nobel Laureates - Chemistry
This is an index of photographs of the winners of the nobel Prize in Fritz Pregl;1924 No Prize Awarded; 1925 - Richard A. Zsigmondy; 1926 - Theodor svedberg;
http://chemistry.about.com/library/blchemists.htm
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Chemistry
with Anne Marie Helmenstine
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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.

27. Prix Nobel De Chimie - Wikipedia
Voir aussi Prix nobel. 1925 Richard Adolf Zsigmondy; 1926 Theodor svedberg;1927 Heinrich Otto Wieland; 1928 Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus;
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prix_Nobel_de_Chimie
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Prix Nobel de chimie
(Redirigé depuis Prix Nobel de Chimie Voir aussi Prix Nobel

28. 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). 186504-01 - 1929-09-29)Colloid chemistry (ultramicroscope) 1926 Theodor svedberg (Sweden, 1884-08
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

29. Sweden's Nobel Stamps List
Facit 127983, H348 (1983) nobel Prize winners in Chemistry A Tiselius,G de Hevesy, S. Arrhenius, Th svedberg, H von Euler-Chelpin;
http://www.asis.com/~edenson/swenobellist.html
Main Swedish page or Nobel Page A List of Nobel Prize Related Items from Swedish Philately
  • Nobel himself
  • The Nobel Winners Series
  • Winners Commemorated for Other Reasons
  • The Beginnings of a Specialized Listing Note: Facit listings include "H" prefixed numbers. These are complete booklets. Scott "B" prefixes are Semi-postals. Scott does not list booklets for pre-1993 issues, but does list the booklet panes usually as an "a" variety. American dealers usually sell booklets as if they were just the panes.
  • Alfred Nobel
  • Facit 372-73 , Scott 380-82, 382a (1946) 50th Anniversary of Nobel's death.
  • Facit 1934 ,Scott 2155 (1995)Nobel and his will
  • Facit 1935 , Scott 2156 (1995) Nobel's house in Paris
  • Facit 1936 , Scott 2157 (1995) Nobel's laboratory in Bjorkborn, Karlskoga
  • The Institutions Connected with the Awards
  • Facit 1399 (1986) The Swedish Academy (Literature prize). Note the Academy meets in the Stock Exchange building (see ceremonies)
  • Facit 624-25, H203-204; Scott ( ) 1968. Three hundredth anniversary of the Sveriges Riksbank. On this occasion the Economics Prize in memoriam of Alfred Nobel was organized. It has been awarded annually starting in 1969. Stamp motiv: Seal of the bank.
  • The Nobel Forum building in Stockholm is represented in a stylised manner as the cachet on the 1996 Nobel FDC. The architect was Johan Celsing.
  • 30. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
    method of microanalysis of organic substances 1924 - The nobel Prize for becomefundamental in modern colloid chemistry 1926 Theodor svedberg (Sweden) for
    http://www.nidlink.com/~jfromm/nobel.htm
    Nobel Laureates in Chemistry
    Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (Netherlands) "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions" Emil H. Fischer (Germany) "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his work on sugar and purine syntheses" Svante A. Arrhenius (Sweden) "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation" Sir William Ramsay (United Kingdom) "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" Adolf von Baeyer (Germany) "in recognition of his services in the advancement of organic chemistry and the chemical industry, through his work on organic dyes and hydroaromatic compounds" Henri Moissan (France) "in recognition of the great services rendered by him in his investigation and isolation of the element fluorine, and for the adoption in the service of science of the electric furnace called after him" Eduard Buchner (Germany) "for his biochemical researches and his discovery of cellfree fermentation"

    31. Nobel Prize In Chemistry - Wikipedia
    http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html. William Aston 1923 Fritz Pregl1925 Richard Adolf Zsigmondy 1926 The (Theodor) svedberg 1927 Heinrich Otto
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize/Chemistry
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    Nobel Prize in Chemistry
    (Redirected from Nobel Prize/Chemistry Winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry , listed by year of award in ascending order.
    Jacobus Henricus van't Hoff Hermann Emil Fischer Svante August Arrhenius Sir William Ramsay ... Richard Adolf Zsigmondy The (Theodor) Svedberg Heinrich Otto Wieland Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Arthur Harden Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin ... Robert Curl , Sir Harold Kroto Richard Smalley Paul D. Boyer John E. Walker ... Koichi Tanaka
    Source: http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/index.html
    Edit this page
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    It was last modified 18:30 Mar 13, 2003. All text is available under the terms of the

    32. Nobel For Chemistry: All Laureates
    Reinhold Windaus 1927 Heinrich Otto Wieland 1926 The (Theodor) svedberg 1925 Richard TheNobel Prize A History of Genius, Controversy and Prestige by Burton
    http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/chem-list.html
    NOBEL
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    IG Nobel 2002 The invention of :-) West Nile Virus Asteroid Impact? ... Book: Russell Read also: Nobel Prize Women in Science : Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries by Sharon Bertsch McGrayne THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR CHEMISTRY: ALL WINNERS 2001 William Knowles, K. Barry Sharpless, Ryoji Noyori 2000 Alan J. Heeger, Alan G. MacDiarmid, Hideki Shirakawa 1999 Ahmed H. Zewail 1998 Walter Kohn, John A. Pople 1997 Paul D. Boyer, John E. Walker, Jens C. Skou 1996 Robert F. Curl Jr., Sir Harold W. Kroto, Richard E. Smalley 1995 Paul J. Crutzen, Mario J. Molina, F. Sherwood Rowland 1994 George A. Olah 1993 Kary B. Mullis, Michael Smith 1992 Rudolph A. Marcus

    33. Nobel Prize In Physics 1921 Speech
    as colloidal solutions, a behaviour which has been studied by svedberg, Perrin, Zsigmondy forwhich in particular Einstein has received the nobel Prize, falls
    http://leiwen.tripod.com/nobelsp.htm
    Home Up
    Nobel Prize in Physics 1921
    Presentation Speech by Professor S. Arrhenius, Chairman of the Nobel Committee for Physics of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
    Your Majesty, Your Royal Highnesses, Ladies and Gentlemen. There is probably no physicist living today whose name has become so widely known as that of Albert Einstein. Most discussion centres on his theory of relativity. This pertains essentially to epistemology and has therefore been the subject of lively debate in philosophical circles. It will be no secret that the famous philosopher Bergson in Paris has challenged this theory, while other philosophers have acclaimed it wholeheartedly. The theory in question also has astrophysical implications which are being rigorously examined at the present time. Throughout the first decade of this century the so-called Brownian movement stimulated the keenest interest. In 1905 Einstein founded a kinetic theory to account for this movement by means of which he derived the chief properties of suspensions, i.e. liquids with solid particles suspended in them. This theory, based on classical mechanics, helps to explain the behaviour of what are known as colloidal solutions, a behaviour which has been studied by Svedberg, Perrin, Zsigmondy and countless other scientists within the context of what has grown into a large branch of science, colloid chemistry. An associated phenomenon is photo-luminescence, i.e.phosphorescence and fluorescence. When light impinges on a substance the latter will occasionally become luminous as a result of phosphorescence or fluorescence. Since the energy of the light quantum increases with the frequency, it will be obvious that a light quantum with a certain frequency can only give rise to the formation of a light quantum of lower or, at most, equal frequency. Otherwise energy would be created. The phosphorescent or fluorescent light hence has a lower frequency than the light inducing the photo-luminescence. This is Stokes' rule which was explained in this way by Einstein by means of the quantum theory.

    34. CHEM-342, Bkgd Svedberg & Fahraeus Article
    macromolecules and developed a way to determine their molecular weight.For this work, svedberg received the 1926 nobel Prize in Chemistry.
    http://www.udel.edu/chem/white/teaching/CHEM342/SvedbergBkgd98.html
    CHEM-342 INTRODUCTION TO BIOCHEMISTRY A New Direct Method for the Determination of the Molecular Weight of the Proteins J. Am. Chem. Soc
    Background
    Lord Kelvin, close friend, fellow physicist, and frequent correspondent of G. G. Stokes (1), defined science in terms of measurement. Kelvin once said, "If you can't measure something in numbers, your knowledge of it is not really scientific." He also said, "I can't really understand something unless I can make a mechanical model of it." By those criteria, Kelvin must have considered his friend's article on cruorine pure fluff. That article by Stokes, which we read at the beginning of the semester, dealt with the effect of various reducing agents and carbon dioxide on the absorption spectrum of oxyhemoglobin (2). It lacked numerical measurement and used only chemical analogies. Despite its qualitative nature, the article presented significant scientific observations. It initiated a trail of research that involved many physical, chemical, and mathematical models. From our perspective, Stokes had a primitive understanding of oxidation and reduction that prevented him from sorting out the reason that reducing agents and carbon dioxide had similar effects on the spectrum of oxyhemoglobin. It took more than 60 years until Conant (3, in your course reader), using quantitative electrochemical methods and mathematical models (

    35. Welcome To IOrganik.com-Nobel
    chemistry (ultramicroscope). 1926 Theodor svedberg (Sweden, 188408-30- 1971-02-26) Disperse systems (ultracentrifuge). 1927 Heinrich
    http://www.iorganik.com/nobelprizes.htm
    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

    36. Nobel Prize For Chemistry
    nobel Prize for Chemistry. awarded to Richard Zsigmondy (Germany), for work on theheterogeneous nature of colloid solutions 1926 Theodor svedberg (Sweden), for
    http://www.factmonster.com/ipa/A0105786.html

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    Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Arts and Entertainment Awards Nobel Prizes
    Nobel Prize for Chemistry
    For years not listed, no award was made.
    Jacobus H. van't Hoff (Netherlands), for laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions Emil Fischer (Germany), for experiments in sugar and purin groups of substances Svante A. Arrhenius (Sweden), for his electrolytic theory of dissociation Sir William Ramsay (U.K.), for discovery and determination of place of inert gaseous elements in air Adolf von Baeyer (Germany), for work on organic dyes and hydroaromatic combinations Henri Moissan (France), for isolation of fluorine, and introduction of electric furnace

    37. Svedberg, Theodor
    nobel Prize for Chemistry 1926. svedberg was born near Gävle, studied at Uppsalaand spent his career there, as professor 191249 and head of the Institute of
    http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/S/Svedberg/1.htm
    Svedberg, Theodor Swedish chemist. In 1924 he constructed the first ultracentrifuge, a machine that allowed the rapid separation of particles by mass. This can reveal the presence of contaminants in a sample of a new protein, or distinguish between various long-chain polymers. Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1926.
    Svedberg prepared a number of new organosols from more than 30 metals. Through an ultramicroscope, he studied the particles in these sols and confirmed Albert Einstein's theories about Brownian movement.
    Svedberg discovered that thorium-X crystallizes with lead and barium salts (but not with others), anticipating English chemist Frederick Soddy's demonstration of the existence of isotopes.
    Svedberg also investigated, about 1923, the chemistry involved in the formation of latent images in photographic emulsions.
    Working on synthetic polymers, Svedberg introduced electron microscopy to study natural and regenerated cellulose, X-ray diffraction techniques to investigate cellulose fibres, and electron diffraction to analyse colloidal micelles and crystallites.

    38. Nobel.html
    Winners of the nobel Prize in Chemistry. 1925 Richard Adolf Zsigmondy Study of colloids.1926 Theodor svedberg Study of colloid chemistry and Brownian motion.
    http://server.ccl.net/cca/documents/dyoung/topics-framed/nobel.shtml
    http://server.ccl.net/cca/documents/dyoung/topics-framed/nobel.shtml CCL nobel.html topics checkpoint.html chem_links.html compchem.html ... vib.html
    Winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
    Jacobus Hendricus van't Hoff Chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure. Emil Hermann Fischer Work on carbohydrates and purines. Svante August Arrhenius Theory of electrolytic dissociation. Sir William Ramsay Discovery of helium, neon, xenon and krypton. Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer Synthetic organic chemistry, particularily for the synthesis of indigo and triphenylmethane dyes. Preparing pure fluorine and developing the electric furnace (the Moissan furnace). Eduard Buchner Biochemical research including discovery of cell-less fermentation (fermentation in a test tube by extracting the active enzymes from yeast cells). Ernest Rutherford Study of radioactive substances. Friedrich Wilhelm Ostwald Work on catalysis, chemical equilibrium and reaction rates. Otto Wallach Work on alicyclic compounds. Marie Curie Chemistry of radioactive isotopes.

    39. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
    nobel Prizes in Chemistry. This Year's nobel Prize in Chemistry The prize for1926 svedberg, THE (THEODOR), Sweden, Uppsala University, * 1884, + 1971
    http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/chem/acs-inorganic/Nobel.html
    Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
    This Year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry
    Chemistry 1901
    VAN'T HOFF, JACOBUS HENRICUS, the Netherlands, Berlin University, Germany, * 1852, + 1911: "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions".
    Chemistry 1902
    FISCHER, HERMANN EMIL, Germany, Berlin University, * 1852, + 1919 "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his work on sugar and purine syntheses".
    Chemistry 1903
    ARRHENIUS, SVANTE AUGUST, Sweden, Stockholm University, * 1859, + 1927 "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation".
    Chemistry 1904
    RAMSAY, Sir WILLIAM, Great Britain, London University, * 1852, + 1916: "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".
    Chemistry 1905
    VON BAEYER, JOHANN FRIEDRICH WILHELM ADOLF, Germany, Munich University, * 1835, + 1917:

    40. Fq - Prémios Nobel Da Química
    svedberg; 1925 Richard Adolf
    http://atelier.uarte.mct.pt/fq/quem/nobelqui.htm
    Temas disponíveis Ácido-base Astronomia Átomo Dinâmica Electricidade Energia Estado gasoso Laboratório Orgânica Precipitação Reacções Soluções Substâncias Quem? Tabelas Outros links Índice Menu principal quem? Páginas neste tema Bibliografia Biografias Prémios Nobel da Física Prémios Nobel da Química Prémios Nobel da Química Galardoados com o Prémio Nobel da Química, atribuído pela Fundação Nobel , para distinguir trabalhos de grande importância na investigação Química:
    • 2002 John B. Fenn, Koichi Tanaka, Kurt Wüthrich 2001 William S. Knowles, Ryoji Noyori, K. Barry Sharpless 2000 Alan J. Heeger, Alan G. MacDiarmid, Hideki Shirakawa 1999 Ahmed H. Zewail 1998 Walter Kohn, John A. Pople 1997 Paul D. Boyer, John E. Walker, Jens C. Skou 1996 Robert F. Curl Jr., Sir Harold W. Kroto, Richard E. Smalley 1995 Paul J. Crutzen, Mario J. Molina, F. Sherwood Rowland 1994 George A. Olah 1993 Kary B. Mullis, Michael Smith 1992 Rudolph A. Marcus

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