@SportsCenter: Girls can’t play sports? Your top play of the night comes from the University of Florida’s Women’s Soccer team on an overtime buzzer-beating goal! Check it out.…
Ochoa got her Bachelor of Science degree in Physics at San Diego State University in 1980. Then she went to Stanford University…
This sentence gives the reader a hint by stating that the scientist is in her laboratory. It is here where the scientist usually conducts any experiment so it is only right that I would believe this to be the appropriate sentence for this step.…
David has access to many books on chemistry and of the elements, such as The Golden Book of Chemistry, by Robert Brent, as well as Modern Chemistry,…
In 1931, he was also elected president of the Institute of Physics. Ernest was offered the chair at Manchester University in 1906 and he did accept the offer, so he moved to Manchester’s new laboratories. Rutherford was luckily enough to be rewarded with the Nobel Prize in 1908, in Chemistry for his work on the transmutation of elements and the chemistry of radioactive material. In the year 1919, Ernest became the Director of the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. Ernest had won the Marlborough Education Board scholarship to Nelson College in 1877. The element Rf was named Rutherfordium in honor of Rutherford. In 1895, Ernest was awarded an Exhibition of 1851 Science Research Scholarship. He was also knighted in the New Year’s Honors list for 1914. Ernest became a member of the Order of Merit in the New Year’s Honors list for 1925. In 1916, Rutherford was awarded the Hector Memorial Medal. He was awarded a research fellowship and when he was awarded it, it allowed him to attend graduate school at University of Cambridge’s Cavendish Laboratory. He had won the only available Senior Scholarship for mathematics. In 1898, Rutherford was rewarded the opportunity to become a physics professor at McGill University in Montreal and he accepted the offer. In 1904, Rutherford had his first book “Radioactivity”…
* Max Perutz – was the head of the unit where Crick works at Cambridge University. Perutz also shared important X-ray crystallography imagery with Watson and Crick that he had received from Maurice Wilkins and Franklin. Whether he was supposed to give this information to Watson and Crick without Franklin’s knowledge is unknown, nor is it entirely known how important her work was to the discovery of the structure.…
well. In 1947, Thatcher earned a degree in chemistry; thus, resulting in Thatcher earning a job as…
Karen Horney defines a basic anxiety as insidiously increasing, all pervading feeling of being lonely and helpless in a hostile world” (Horney, 1937, p.89). When a child experiences basic anxiety they can develop self defense mechanisms. These self defense mechanisms can become very common throughout the child’s life. So common in fact, that they become a permanent part of one’s personality and become a neurotic need. Horney developed a list of ten neurotic needs that could be categorized into three neurotic trends: moving towards other people (the complaint personality), moving against other people (the aggressive personality) and movement away from other people (the detached personality) (Shultz & Shultz, 2013, p.164). An apparent connection can be drawn between Horney’s neurotic trends and Timothy Keller’s chapter “The Seduction of Success” in his book Counterfeit Gods. According to Keller, “a sign you may…
Eudora Welty was born in Jackson, Mississippi on April 13, 1909. She was the oldest of three children and the only girl of a very close-knit family. Her father, Christian Webb Welty, was an Ohio native who worked for an insurance company. Her mother, Mary Chestina Welty, had been a schoolteacher in West Virginia. Welty’s mother, being a schoolteacher, loved to read and influenced Welty to read at a young age. In her biography, Welty tells about her earliest memories of her parents reading to her and to each other at night. She was always surrounded by books and was always reading. Her love of reading led her to graduate high school and further her education, which most girls during this time…
Her accomplishments are seemingly never-ending. After earning her master’s degree in science and physics in only three years, Marie Curie went to achieve bigger and better things – things that most people can only dream of accomplishing. Marie was actually paid by the Society for the Encouragement of National Industry to investigate the magnetic properties of different steels. It was not too long before Marie started to notice unusual activity from uranium, which she would eventually discover to be “radiation.” After years of sleepless nights spent working in the lab, Marie, with the help of her husband, discovered that thorium and uranium gave off radioactive waves. Pierre Curie later proved that these waves could damage flesh, but could also be a way to treat cancer and other ailments. Marie, as well as her husband, went on to discover two new elements recently unknown to man, those being polonium and radium. Marie became the first woman to win a Nobel Prize for her scientific achievements, but the awards did not stop there. She later became the first person ever to win a second Nobel Prize. Although Marie Curie’s life was brought to an end by overexposure to radiation, she will forever be remembered as a driven and dedicated individual, who would not let anything get in the way of her one true passion –…
She served as director of Northside until her retirement in 1980. She also taught at Yeshiva…
He spent seven years working with systematic determination of the electrode potentials of the elements. The next year he returned to Cambridge, Massachusetts when MIT appointed him to a faculty position, in which he had a chance to join a group of outstanding physical chemists under the direction of Arthur Amos Noyes. He became an assistant professor in 1907, associate professor on 1908, and full professor in 1911. In 1912 he married Mary Sheldon, daughter of Harvard Professor, and they had 3 children two sons and one daughter. He left MIT in 1912 to move to California to teach chemistry at the University of Berkeley. Several years later, he became the Dean of the College of Chemistry at Berkeley, where he spent the rest of his life. He was a brother of Alpha Chi Sigma, the professional chemistry fraternity. In 1916, he proposed his theory of bonding and added information about electrons in the Periodic Table of Elements. His theory was that there are eight electrons in the outer orbit of an atom. He also postulated the electron pair relationship of acids and bases that is known as the Lewis theory of acids and bases. In 1933, he started his research on isotope…
Marie died of over radium exposure on July 4, 1934. She had two children named Irene and Eve. Marie was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize in physics and chemistry. Modern uses of radium are to power electricity plants, navy submarines and ships, and spacecrafts in deep space. The uses for radium are endless. Marie is inspiring because she never gave up on her research on radium, even when everyone was against her because she was a woman. Pierre Curie also died when her children were young, so she had to take care of them herself. I would like to be as determined as her…
From 1949-50, he concentrated on the hydrogen bomb and contributing to the decision to make the thermonuclear reaction major part of the U.S defence system. However, Teller was often ostracized by much of the scientific community. His continuation of looking for support from the U.S government and the military research establishment has earn the support from them, particularly for his advocacy for nuclear energy development, a strong nuclear arsenal and a vigorous nuclear testing program [2]. His advocacy of competition in the national interest to ensure excellence in nuclear developments led to creation of the Livermore site of what was then called the University of California Radiation Laboratory in 1952, now the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [3]. Teller served as Laboratory Director at Livermore for two years during the late 1950s and thereafter as Associated Director for physics until his retirement in 1975. In the same year, he was named as the Director Emeritus of the Lab as was appointed as Senior Research Fellow at the Hoover institution, positions he held until his death at the age of…
To their research adviser, Mrs. Liza O. Juanich, that brought them the inspiration to work harder and for always guiding them everytime they perform experiments.…