text stringlengths 105 10.9k | label int64 0 1 | label_text stringclasses 2
values |
|---|---|---|
Initially, Herzberg considered a career in astronomy, but his application to the Hamburg Observatory was returned advising him not to pursue a career in the field without private financial support. After completing high school at the Gelehrtenschule des Johanneums, Herzberg continued his education at Darmstadt Univers... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
*Ultraviolet Absorption and Emission Spectra of Carbon Monoxide
*The Ultra-Violet Band Spectrum of Nitrogen
*New Ultra-Violet Spectrum of Helium
*Absorption and Emission Spectra in the Region λ 600-1100.
*New Oxygen Spectra in the Ultraviolet and new Spectra in Nitrogen
*Preparation of Schumann plates
*The Ultraviolet ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In their early years Martin and his elder brother received lessons at home in carpentry (p 498 of ) and manual skills became important for him throughout his life. This was for relaxation – he built boats to his own designs (p 498 of ) – and professionally. In his wartime radar work (), his post-war radio-telescope bui... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 1955 Hallam was appointed to the staff of the Department of Chemistry at University College of Swansea becoming Senior Lecturer in 1964 and Reader in 1970. In 1963, Hallam took a year's sabbatical and became an adviser in physical chemistry at the new University of Nigeria at Nsukka. He had active international col... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Herschel married his cousin Margaret Brodie Stewart (1810–1884) on 3 March 1829 in Edinburgh, and was father of the following children:
# Caroline Emilia Mary Herschel (31 March 1830 – 29 January 1909), who married the soldier and politician Alexander Hamilton-Gordon
# Isabella Herschel (5 June 1831 – 1893)
# Sir Willi... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
As an academic teacher, he offers semestral courses in general and quantum chemistry. Some of them are available online via the OpenCourseWare platform.
In fall 2017, he taught "Perturbation theory for linear operator", using the book titled the same as the course by mathematician Tosio Kato. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Santiago Schnell FRSB FRSC is a scientist and academic leader, currently serving as the William K. Warren Foundation Dean of the College of Science at the University of Notre Dame, as well as a professor in the Department of Biological Sciences, and Department of Applied and Computational Mathematics and Statistics. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Tia Emmetine Keyes is a professor of physical chemistry at the School of Chemical Sciences, and a member of the National Centre for Sensor Research at Dublin City University. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Born in Elizabeth, New Jersey to a family of Ukrainian immigrants, Kasha studied chemical engineering at night at the Cooper Union in New York City for two years while working full-time during the days at the Merck & Co. research facility in New Jersey. He then received a full scholarship to the University of Michigan,... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Debyes son, Peter P. Debye, interviewed in 2006 at age 89 recollects that his father was completely apolitical and that in the privacy of their home politics were never discussed. According to his son, Debye just wanted to do his job at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute and as long as the Nazis did not bother him was able t... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
As of 2019, Saykally's active research includes:
*Terahertz laser spectroscopy of clusters
*X-ray spectroscopy of liquids and interfaces
*Nonlinear optical spectroscopy of liquids and interfaces
*Chemical interactions on liquid surfaces
*X-ray laser nonlinear optical spectroscopy | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* Waller, John, "Einstein's Luck: The Truth Behind Some of the Greatest Scientific Discoveries". Oxford University Press, 2003. .
* Physics paper [https://history.aip.org/history/exhibits/gap/Millikan/Millikan.html#millikan1 On the Elementary Electrical Charge and the Avogadro Constant (extract)] Robert Andrews Millika... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He teaches classes on global warming, environmental chemistry, and global geochemical cycles. He is the author of Global Warming: Understanding the Forecast, an introductory textbook on the environmental sciences for non-science undergraduates. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
August Herman Pfund (December 28, 1879 – January 4, 1949) was an American physicist, spectroscopist, and inventor. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In April 2023, Schwarz was one of the 22 personal guests at the ceremony in which former Chancellor Angela Merkel was decorated with the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit for special achievement by President Frank-Walter Steinmeier at Schloss Bellevue in Berlin. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Vladimir Konstantinovich Prokofiev (, 1898–1993) was a Soviet scientist, known for his work on atomic emission spectroscopy. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He was born in South Africa and took his B.Sc. in chemistry and mathematics from the University of Witwatersrand in 1948. De Maine emigrated to England in 1949. He later moved to Canada where he completed his Ph.D. in physical chemistry at the University of British Columbia. He finally moved to the United States in 195... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Apeloig was born in Bukhara, Uzbekistan after his family fled from the Nazis after the invasion of Poland in September 1939. In 1947, when he was three years old, the family immigrated to Israel. He served in the Nahal Brigade and the paratroopers between 1962 and 1964. He studied chemistry and physics at the Hebrew Un... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In 1928, Grigory Landsberg and Leonid Mandelstam at the Moscow State University independently discovered the Raman effect. They published their findings in July issue of Naturwissenschaften, and presented their findings at the Sixth Congress of the Russian Association of Physicists held at Saratov between 5 and 16 Augu... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 1843, the Royal Scottish Society of the Arts awarded Swan a gold medal for his scientific achievements. He served as their President 1882–1885. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* Vibrational spectroscopy of trapped species; infrared and Raman studies of matrix-isolated molecules, radicals and ions. London; New York: J. Wiley (1973 )
* Modern Analytical Methods. London: Chemical Society (1972 ) | 1 | Spectroscopists |
*1927 – elected International Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
*1930 – Rumford Medal for work relating to specific heats and X-ray spectroscopy
*1936 – Nobel Prize in Chemistry ([http://nobelprize.org/chemistry/laureates/1936/index.html entry at nobelprize.org]) "for his contributions to the... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Prokhorov became a member of the Communist Party in 1950. In 1983, together with three other academicians – Andrey Tychonoff, Anatoly Dorodnitsyn and Georgy Skryabin – he signed the famous open letter called "when they lose honor and conscience" (Когда теряют честь и совесть), denouncing Andrey Sakharovs article in the... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Julia Elizabeth Rice (born 1960) is a British-American computational chemist who works for IBM Research at their Almaden Research Center in San Jose California. Her work their involves the study of nonlinear optics in the simulation of organic molecules, the development of the Mulliken software package for quantum chem... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Coote returned to Australia in 2001 and joined the Research School of Chemistry, Australian National University as a postdoctoral fellow with Leo Radom. It was during this time that she began to build a reputation in computational chemistry, and she established an independent research group on the computer-aided chemic... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Manuel Cardona Castro (7 September 1934 – 2 July 2014) was a condensed matter physicist. According to the ISI Citations web database, Cardona was one of the eight most cited physicists since 1970. He specialized in solid state physics. Cardonas main interests were in the fields of: Raman scattering (and other opt... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* 1983: M. S. Garley
* 1984: T. A. Sheppard
* 1986: A. M. M. Doherty and P. Graham
* 1988: Miss S. L. Giddings
* 1989: G. Williams
* 1990: Miss T. J. Lovelock
* 1991: Ian A. Evetts
* 1993: A. J. Parry
* 1994: S. R. Andrews and Prof David A. Worsley
* 1995 P. D. J. Anderson
* 1996: Sara Shinton
* 1997: P. Green and R. P... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
*2006 – Research Prize of the Chemistry Faculty of the University of Bochum
*2006 – Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics (with Jan Peter Toennies) from the Franklin Institute.
*2003 – Creativity Award from the NSF 2003-5
*2004 – Texas A&M University, Frontiers in Chemical Research Lecturer
*2004 – Moscowitz Lecturer ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
James W. Brault (February 10, 1932 – November 1, 2008) was a 20th-century scientist and a pioneer of Fourier transform spectroscopy. He was a world-leading expert in physical instrument design, numerical methods as applied to spectroscopy, and in atomic and molecular spectroscopy.
He graduated from Princeton University... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
After graduating, Gouterman was appointed to the faculty at Harvard University where he worked as a postdoctoral researcher with William Moffitt. Shortly after Gouterman arrived, Moffitt died of a heart attack during a squash game. Gouterman was quickly promoted to assistant professor, and spent his time using quantum ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Richardson was born on January 25, 1941, and grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey. Her father was an electrical engineer and her mother was an English teacher. Her parents encouraged an interest in science and she was a member of local astronomy clubs as early as elementary school. She attended Teaneck High School and in 195... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Throughout his career, Wang has predominately studied nanoclusters and solution-phase chemistry in the gas phase, focusing on the fundamental behaviors of nanoclusters using photoelectron spectroscopy and computational techniques. With his group, Wang has discovered golden bucky-balls and the smallest golden pyramid, a... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Rydberg was born 8 November 1854 in Halmstad in southern Sweden, the only child of Sven Rydberg and Maria Anderson Rydberg. When he was 4 years old his father died, and the family was forced to live on a small income. In 1873 he graduated from Halmstads elementärläroverk, where he received high grades in maths and phys... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Compton died in Berkeley, California, from a cerebral hemorrhage on March 15, 1962. He was outlived by his wife (who died in 1980) and sons. Compton is buried in the Wooster Cemetery in Wooster, Ohio. Before his death, he was professor-at-large at the University of California, Berkeley for spring 1962.
Compton received... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
John Nelson Howard (February 27, 1921 – April 15, 2015) was president of the Optical Society of America in 1991. He was the founding editor of the scientific journal Applied Optics. Howard was also a chief scientist of the Air Force Geophysics Laboratory.
He was a Fellow of the Optical Society and received the OSA Dis... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
* Calculation of electronic states and transitions using many-particle methods (computational chemistry)
* Spectroscopy and radiationless relaxation of polyatomic molecules
* Electron-molecule scattering, photoionization and Auger decay
* Wave packet dynamics (the multi-configuration time-dependent Hartree method).
* ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
The push for a synchrotron lightsource in Canada gained impetus in the early 1990s with the formation of the Canadian Institute for Synchrotron Radiation (CISR) with Bancroft as president. In 1994 NSERC recommended building a Canadian synchrotron, and set up a committee to decide between two rival bids to host the faci... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
After receiving his doctorate in 1965 Williams was employed at the University of Arizona until 1983. From 1985 to 1993 he served as director of the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile, and from 1993 to 1998 he was director of STSci.
As the director of STScI, he decided to devote a substantial fraction of h... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Raman's second important discovery on the scattering of light was a new type of radiation, an eponymous phenomenon called the Raman effect. After discovering the nature of light scattering that caused blue colour of water, he focused on the principle behind the phenomenon. His experiments in 1923 showed the possibility... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Smalley, who had taken classes in religion as well as science at Hope College, rediscovered his religious foundation in later life, particularly during his final years while battling cancer. During the final year of his life, Smalley wrote: "Although I suspect I will never fully understand, I now think the answer is v... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He is a laureate of several prestigious awards, including an ETH Latsis Prize, Research Excellence Model of the European Mineralogical Union. In 2012, Oganov won a "1000 talents professor" title in China and in the same year became a Professor Honoris Causa of Yanshan University (China), in 2013 elected Fellow of the M... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Townes had German, Scottish, English, Welsh, Huguenot French, and Scotch Irish ancestry, Townes was born in Greenville, South Carolina, the son of Henry Keith Townes (1876–1958), an attorney, and Ellen Sumter Townes (; 1881–1980). His brother, Henry Keith Townes Jr., (January 20, 1913May 2, 1990), was a renowned entom... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 1981 he received Bourke Medal from Faraday Society and a year later became Christianson Fellow at St. Catherines College, a division of Oxford University. The same year he became a fellow at American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Another two years went by and in 1984 he was awarded an Honorary degree from Scottish H... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
In 1914, Franck teamed up with Hertz to perform an experiment to investigate fluorescence. They designed a vacuum tube for studying energetic electrons that flew through a thin vapour of mercury atoms. They discovered that when an electron collided with a mercury atom it could lose only a specific quantity (4.9 electro... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Siegbahn was born in Lund, Sweden, son of Manne Siegbahn the 1924 physics Nobel Prize winner. Siegbahn earned his doctorate at the University of Stockholm in 1944. He was professor at the Royal Institute of Technology 1951–1954, and then professor of experimental physics at Uppsala University 1954–1984, which was the s... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
After graduating, Schulten joined the Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Göttingen, where he remained till 1980. At the institute, he worked with Albert Weller on electron transfer reactions. One of his first projects was to explain a chemical reaction product called a "fast triplet", an excited molecul... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Jerelle A. Joseph is a computational chemist and academic from Dominica, who is also an advocate for representation and diversity in science. She is the founder of CariScholar, a network connecting students and academics from Caribbean countries. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Richardson's first forays into science were in the field of astronomy. By observing the position of Sputnik – at the time, the only artificial satellite – on two successive nights, she managed to calculate its predicted orbit. She submitted her results to the Westinghouse Science Talent Search, winning third place in 1... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Keyes is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and a Fellow of the Institute of Chemistry of Ireland. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He graduated from Rice University, with a B.A. in 1956 and PhD in 1959.
He studied the University of Upsala, and the University of California, Berkeley.
He taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1962 to 1988. | 1 | Spectroscopists |
His main research interest was in the field of computational chemistry. Basch was a pioneer in computational quantum chemistry, in developing methods and innovative applications of theoretical concepts and equations to solving problems in chemistry. Already in 1962, as a beginning graduate student at Columbia Universit... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Bhide was an elected fellow of the Indian Academy of Sciences (1974), National Academy of Sciences, India, Indian National Science Academy, Maharashtra Academy of Sciences, Indian Cryogenics Council and the Royal Astronomical Society. He delivered several award lectures such as INSA K. Rangadhama Rao Memorial Lecture, ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He joined the University of Texas Astronomy Department in 1973 where
he received his Ph.D. in 1978, studying
the 1975 explosion of V1500 Cygni at
McDonald Observatory.
From 1978 to 1980 he was at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge
where he worked with Martin Rees on
International Ultraviolet Explorer observations
o... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Douglas Rayner Hartree (27 March 1897 – 12 February 1958) was an English mathematician and physicist most famous for the development of numerical analysis and its application to the Hartree–Fock equations of atomic physics and the construction of a differential analyser using Meccano. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
James L. Kinsey (October 15, 1934, in Paris, Texas – December 20, 2014, in Houston, Texas) was an American chemist, and D. R. Bullard-Welch Foundation Professor at Rice University.
He won the 1995 Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy.
He was a 1969 Guggenheim Fellow. He was a Fellow of the American A... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Zeeman received the following awards for his contributions.
* Nobel Prize for Physics (1902)
* Matteucci Medal (1912)
* Elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Society (ForMemRS) in 1921
* Henry Draper Medal from the National Academy of Sciences (1921)
* Rumford Medal (1922)
* Franklin Medal (1925)
The crater Zeeman on t... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Ramans elder brother Chandrasekhara Subrahmanya Ayyar had joined the Indian Finance Service (now Indian Audit and Accounts Service), the most prestigious government service in India. In no condition to study abroad, Raman followed suit and qualified for the Indian Finance Service achieving first position in the entranc... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
After completing her DPhil at Oxford, Martin returned to Australia to take up a post-doctoral position at Bond University in 1990. However, the unexpected closure of the School of Science and Technology resulted in her leaving Australia in 1991 for a post-doctoral position with Professor John Kuriyan, a structural biol... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In addition to his crucial and famous contribution to quantum electrodynamics via the Lamb shift, in the latter part of his career he paid increasing attention to the field of quantum measurements. In one of his writings Lamb stated that "most people who use quantum mechanics have little need to know much about the in... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Mark A. Johnson is an American physical chemist and a professor of chemistry at Yale University. He received his Ph.D. at Stanford University in 1983.
Johnson is a co-editor of Annual Review of Physical Chemistry beginning with its 2012 issue. He became a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 1999, a Fellow of the... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Shortly after his discovery, Zeeman was offered a position as lecturer in Amsterdam, where he started to work in autumn of 1896. In 1900, this was followed by his promotion to professor of physics at the University of Amsterdam. In 1902, together with his former mentor Lorentz, he received the Nobel Prize for Physics f... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Klaus Schulten (January 12, 1947 – October 31, 2016) was a German-American computational biophysicist and the Swanlund Professor of Physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Schulten used supercomputing techniques to apply theoretical physics to the fields of biomedicine and bioengineering and dy... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
John Stewart Waugh (April 25, 1929 – August 22, 2014) was an American chemist and Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is known for developing average hamiltonian theory and using it to extend NMR spectroscopy, previously limited to liquids, to the solid state. He is the author of ANTIOP... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Lettsom was a competent scientist in an age when this was still possible for an amateur. He was best known as the joint author of Greg and Lettsoms Manual of the Mineralogy of Great Britain and Ireland', which was the most complete and accurate work that had appeared on the mineralogy of the British Isles. First publi... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Wheatstone was involved in various disputes with other scientists throughout his life regarding his role in different technologies and appeared at times to take more credit than he was due. As well as William Fothergill Cooke, Alexander Bain and David Brewster, mentioned above, these also included Francis Ronalds at th... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Harold Basch (; 29 November 1940 – 8 November 2018) was a professor of chemistry who specialized in computational chemistry. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
* Henryk A. Witek, Takahito Nakijima, Kimihiko Hirao, "Relativistic and correlated all-electron calculations on the ground and excited states of AgH and AuH", J. Chem. Phys. 113, 8015 (2000).
* Henryk A. Witek, Stephan Irle, Keiji Morokuma, "Analytical second-order geometrical derivatives of energy for the self-consist... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
In 1978, Still and coworkers published a highly influential paper reporting a purification technique known as flash column chromatography. Prior to this report, column chromatography using silica gel as a stationary phase had already been established as a valuable method for the separation and purification of organic ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
David Herr Rank (January 2, 1907 – January 17, 1981) was an American spectroscopist.
Rank was born in Annville, Pennsylvania and attended Lebanon Valley College in his hometown. He pursued graduate study at Pennsylvania State University beginning in 1930 and joined the faculty in 1935. Rank was appointed the Evan Pugh ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Dirks and Ueda married in 2007. She initially also worked at D. E. Shaw Research, but stopped in 2010 to raise the first of two children. The couple settled in the Westchester County suburb of Chappaqua, New York. He rose early to commute to his job via Metro-North Railroad's Harlem Line, and returned late but devoted ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
* John Simmon Guggenheim Foundation Fellow, 1970–71
* Standard Oil Foundation Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, 1970
* Kenan Research Leave, University of North Carolina, 1970–71
* Outstanding Alumnus Award, department of chemistry, Kansas State University, 1973
* Distinguished Alumnus Award, Wayne State ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Richard Errett Smalley (June 6, 1943 – October 28, 2005) was an American chemist who was the Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry, Physics, and Astronomy at Rice University. In 1996, along with Robert Curl, also a professor of chemistry at Rice, and Harold Kroto, a professor at the University of Sussex, he... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
*Knight of the Legion of Honour
*Officier of the National Order of Merit
*Grand Cordon of the National Order of the Cedar
*Grand Officer of the Order of the Two Niles
*Commander of the Order of the Republic
*Grand Officer of Order of Zayed | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Although Prof. Rode's initial research activities were in field of inorganic chemistry, he soon extended his expertise into the rapidly developing field of theoretical and computational chemistry. Whereas in the beginning most studies focused on quantum chemical computations of a broad range of chemical systems, later ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
He remained at this university for his entire career apart from spending 1931 on sabbatical as Visiting Professor at Ohio State University in the USA. From 1924 until 1944 he was a special lecturer in spectroscopy in the Chemistry Department. He was then appointed to the Johnston Chair of Biochemistry in the Department... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Robert Andrews Millikan (March 22, 1868 – December 19, 1953) was an American experimental physicist who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1923 for the measurement of the elementary electric charge and for his work on the photoelectric effect.
Millikan graduated from Oberlin College in 1891 and obtained his doctorate a... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He was born in Nayland, Suffolk, the eldest son of Dr. Edward Liveing (1795–1843) and Catherine Mary Downing (1798-1872). | 1 | Spectroscopists |
As an undergraduate at Harvard College, Bidelman received an Honorary Harvard College Scholarship for academic excellence in 1939. He graduated in 1940. Bidelman entered the graduate program at the University of Chicago affiliated with Yerkes Observatory. His doctoral advisor was William W.Morgan, who discovered the fi... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Towness opinions concerning science and religion were expounded in his essays "The Convergence of Science and Religion", "Logic and Uncertainties in Science and Religion", and his book Making Waves. Townes felt that the beauty of nature is "obviously God-made" and that God created the universe for humans to emerge and ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Ecker received his doctorate in natural sciences from the University of Vienna in 1991, became appointed Associate Professor for Medicinal Chemistry in 1998 and Full Professor for Pharmacoinformatics in 2009.
Ecker is Editor of Molecular Informatics and coordinates the EUROPIN PhD programme in Pharmacoinformatics. Curr... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Bloembergen met Huberta Deliana Brink (Deli) in 1948 while on vacation with his university's Physics Club. She was able to travel with him to the United States in 1949 on a student hospitality exchange program; he proposed to her when they arrived in the States, and were married by 1950 on return to Amsterdam. They wer... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Pieter Zeeman was born in Zonnemaire, a small town on the island of Schouwen-Duiveland, Netherlands, the son of Rev Catharinus Forandinus Zeeman, a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church, and his wife, Willemina Worst.
Pieter became interested in physics at an early age. In 1883, the aurora borealis happened to be visib... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Baldridge is originally from Minot, North Dakota, and graduated from Minot State University in 1982. She earned her Ph.D. from North Dakota State University and was a postdoctoral researcher at Wesleyan University. After becoming a scientist at the San Diego Supercomputer Center, she became a visiting professor at the ... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Graham R. Fleming is a professor of chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley and member of the Kavli Energy NanoScience Institute based at UCB.
Fleming's team is known for developing and using techniques in advanced multidimensional, ultrafast spectroscopy to study complex condensed phase dynamics in systems... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Siahrostami grew up in Iran, where she completed her undergraduate and graduate degree in physical chemistry. She moved to the Technical University of Denmark for a postdoctoral position at the Center for Atomic-scale Material Design. After two years in Denmark, she joined Stanford University, where she worked with Jen... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
His research focused on following topics in the field of microwave spectroscopy:
* Large amplitude motions in molecules
* Theory of rotational spectra
* Quantum mechanical and group theoretical calculation
* Nuclear quadrupole coupling | 1 | Spectroscopists |
The ACS Award in Chemical Education was renamed the George C. Pimentel Award in Chemical Education in his honor in 1989.
*Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy (1979)
*Wolf Prize in Chemistry (1982)
*Peter Debye Award (1983)
*National Medal of Science (1985)
*Franklin Medal (1985)
*Welch Award (1986)
*Americ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
He is a physical chemist, specializing in spectroscopy of small molecules in the gas phase. He performed the first microwave-optical and optical-optical double resonance experiments on small molecules, and invented the Stimulated Emission Pumping (SEP, or "PUMP and DUMP") spectroscopic method. He is also particularly k... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Gruebele is married to Nancy Makri, who is also a professor of chemistry and physics at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. They have two children, Alexander and Valerie.
He has a strong interest in cycling, running, swimming and triathlon and has competed in many long-distance events, such as the 2013 Boston M... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
He was born in Stuttgart, Germany, son of Helmut Grübele and E. A. Victoria Grübele with two younger siblings Andrea and Philip. He attended the Lycée Français in Vienna, Austria, the Colegio ECOS in Marbella, Spain, and Drew School in San Francisco, US. He completed his B.S in chemistry at the University of California... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Richard Neil Zare (born November 19, 1939, in Cleveland, Ohio) is the Marguerite Blake Wilbur Professor in Natural Science and a Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University. Throughout his career, Zare has made a considerable impact in physical chemistry and analytical chemistry, particularly through the development... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Anders Hallberg (born 29 April 1945 in Vetlanda, Jönköping county (Småland)) is a Swedish pharmaceutical researcher, professor in medicinal chemistry and 2006-2011 Rector Magnificus and Vice Chancellor at Uppsala University.[https://archive.today/20130418172521/http://uadm.uu.se/ViewPage!renderDecoratedPage.action?site... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
*M. Trömel: Die Frankfurter Gelehrtenrepublik. Neue Folge (Hrsg. G. Böhme), Schulz-Kirchner Verlag, Idstein S. 199–214 (2002)
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20090811082100/http://www.anorg.chemie.uni-frankfurt.de/AK_Troemel/geschch.htm Hermann Hartmann and the Theoretical Chemistry in the 20th century (in German)]
*[ht... | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Lu Jeu Sham (Chinese: 沈呂九) (born April 28, 1938) is an American physicist. He is best known for his work with Walter Kohn on the Kohn–Sham equations. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
Herzbergs most significant award was the 1971 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, which he was awarded "for his contributions to the knowledge of electronic structure and geometry of molecules, particularly free radicals". During the presentation speech, it was noted that at the time of the award, Herzberg was "generally consid... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Robert J. Le Roy (September 30, 1943 – August 10, 2018) was a Canadian chemist. He held the distinguished title of University Professor at the University of Waterloo. | 0 | Computational Chemists |
After the discovery of Raman scattering by organic liquids, Rasetti decided to study the same phenomenon in gases at high pressure during his stay at Caltech in 1928–29. The spectra showed vibrational transitions with rotational fine structure. In the homonuclear diatomic molecules H, N and O, Rasetti found an alternat... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Joseph Fraunhofer was the 11th child, born into a Roman Catholic family in Straubing, in the Electorate of Bavaria, to Franz Xaver Fraunhofer and Maria Anna Fröhlich. His father and paternal grandfather Johann Michael had been master glassmakers in Straubing. Fröhlichs family also came from a lineage of glassmakers goi... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
During the mid to late 20th century, several colleges named buildings, physical features, awards, and professorships after Millikan. In 1958, Pomona College named a science building Millikan Laboratory in honor of Millikan. After reviewing Millikan's association with the eugenics movement, the college administration vo... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Ocean Optics' portable spectrometers have been also been used to examine the phosphorescence spectrum of the Hope Diamond, the Blue Heart Diamond and other natural type IIb blue diamonds.
The Smithsonian, the United States Naval Research Laboratory, Ocean Optics Co. and Pennsylvania State University collaborated on a ... | 1 | Spectroscopists |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.