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Cambridge, England

Denbigh, K. G., and Turner, J. C. R., Chemical Reactor Theory, 3d ed., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1984. [Pg.64]

F. Bashforth and J. C. Adams, An Attempt to Test the Theories of Capillary Action, University Press, Cambridge, England, 1883. [Pg.44]

See A. F. Wells, The Third Dimension in Chemistry, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1956, p. 57 and D. W. Thompson, Growth and Crystal Form, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1943, p. 551. [Pg.534]

The Theory of Atomic Spectra, E. U. Condon and G. H. Shortley, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, England (1963)- Condon and Shortley. [Pg.5]

Tyson, J. Analysis What Analytical Chemists Do. Royal Society of Chemistry Cambridge, England, 1988. [Pg.10]

B. V. Voia, P. R. Pujado, T. Imai, and T. R. Fritsch, Recent Advances in the Production of Detergent Olefins and Pinear Alkylbenyenes, Society of Chemical Industry, University of Cambridge, England, Mar. 26—28, 1990. [Pg.55]

C. D. Gutsche in J. F. Stoddart, ed.. Monographs in Supramolecular Chemisty, Calixarenes, Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, England, 1989. Ethyl 702, Technical Bulletin, Ethyl Corporation, Baton Rouge, La. [Pg.69]

Can any number of identical subunits be accommodated in the asymmetric unit while preserving specificity of interactions within an icosahedral arrangement This question was answered by Don Caspar then at Children s Hospital, Boston, and Aaron Klug in Cambridge, England, who showed in a classical paper in 1962 that only certain multiples (1, 3, 4, 7...) of 60 subunits are likely to occur. They called these multiples triangulation numbers, T. Icosahedral virus structures are frequently referred to in terms of their trian-gulation numbers a T = 3 virus structure therefore implies that the number of subunits in the icosahedral shell is 3 x 60 = 180. [Pg.330]

CMS (1995) Cambridge Materials Selector (Granla Design Ltd., Trumpinglon, Cambridge. England). [Pg.499]

I first became interested in the subject of cycles when I went on sabbatical leave to MIT, from Cambridge England to Cambridge Mass. There I was asked by the Director of the Gas Turbine Laboratory, Professor E.S.Taylor, to take over his class on gas turbine cycles for the year. The established text for this course consisted of a beautiful set of notes on cycles by Professor (Sir) William Hawthorne, who had been a member of Whittle s team. Hawthorne s notes remain the best starting point for the subject and I have called upon them here, particularly in the early part of Chapter 3. [Pg.216]

Proclamation by Francis H. C. Crick to pati ons of The Eagle, a pub in Cambridge, England (1953)... [Pg.327]

A. R. Katritzky, University Chemical Laboratory, Cambridge, England (1,27)... [Pg.463]

K. K. Chawla and A. C. Bastos, 3 International Conference on Mechanical Behaviour of Materials, Cambridge (England), Aug. (1979). [Pg.810]

A. R. Mackintosh and O. K. Andersen, Chapter 5.3 in Electrons at the Fermi Surface, edited by M. Springford (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 1980). [Pg.44]

After the war, although now famous, Meitner continued her research in Stockholm, interrupted only by trips to receive honorary degrees and other scientific accolades. She shared in the prestigious Enrico Fermi Prize awarded by the U.S. Atomic Energy Committee in 1966. She retired to Cambridge, England, m 1960, to be near her nephew, Otto Frisch, and died there hi 1968 at the age of ninety. Like so many people all over the world during the Hitler period, Meitner s life had been far from easy, but no reasonable person would ever be tempted to call her life empty. [Pg.792]

Parsons, C. A. (1911). The Steam Turbine, Cambridge, England Cambridge Universicy Press. [Pg.934]

Smith, E. C. (1937). A Short History of Naval and Marine Engineering. Cambridge, England Babcock and Wilcox. [Pg.960]

Very accurate instruments of types (a) and (b) for both scientific and technical purposes are made and sold by the Scientific Instrument Company, Cambridge, England. [Pg.354]

Hayhurst, A. N., PhD Dissertation, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, 1964. [Pg.320]

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology University of Cambridge Cambridge, England... [Pg.506]


See other pages where Cambridge, England is mentioned: [Pg.234]    [Pg.553]    [Pg.1623]    [Pg.1656]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.325]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.937]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.705]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.121 , Pg.205 ]




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