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Wilson, Charles

Chessie E. Rehberg A. Wayne Ruddy D. K. Sankaran Nolan B. Sommer Edgar B. Starkey Alexander R. Surrey John R. Thirtle L. W. Thevoy H. E. TJngnade James VanAllan A. Weissberger Jonathan W. Wiluahs C. V. Wilson Charles H. Wihen J. H. Wood... [Pg.129]

Wilson, Charles Thomson Rees (1869-1959) British physicist, born in Scotland, who studied physics with J. J. Thomson in Cambridge. His best-known achievement was the development of the cloud chamber in 1911, for which he was awarded the 1927 Nobel Prize for physics. [Pg.875]

Wilson, Charles, 1969, Unilever 1945-1965 Challenge Response in the Post-War Industrial Revolution, London Cassell. [Pg.304]

We would like to thank Marjan Race for putting forward the original concept, Shaun Wilson of Charles Evans and Associates and Yale Strausser of Surface Science Laboratories for help in further defining the Series, and the Editors of all the individual volumes for their efforts to produce practical, materials user based volumes. [Pg.763]

Wilson, L. (1970). Lyell, Charles. In Dictionary of Scientific Biography, ed. C. C. Gillispie. New York Charles... [Pg.733]

Wilson, Francis Alexander Charles Cauvin. W.B. Yeats and tradition. London Methuen, 1968. 286p. [Pg.664]

Radioastronomers first learned of 3He in 1955 at the fourth I.A.U. Symposium in Jodrell Bank, when the frequency of the hyperfine 3He+ line at 8.666 GHz (3.46 cm) was included by Charles Townes in a list of radio-frequency lines of interest to astronomy (Townes 1957). The line was (probably) detected for the first time only twenty years later, by Rood, Wilson Steigman (1979) in W51, opening the way to the determination of the 3He abundance in the interstellar gas of our Galaxy via direct (although technically challenging) radioastronomical observations. In the last two decades, a considerable collection of 3He+ abundance determinations has been assembled in Hi I regions and planetary nebulae. The relevance of these results will be discussed in Sect. 4 and 5 respectively. [Pg.344]

Charles JM, Cunny HC, Wilson RD, Bus JS (1996) Comparative studies on 2,4- dichlorophe-noxyacetic acid, amine and ester in rats. Fundam Appl Toxicol 33 161-165... [Pg.432]

During the decade of 1920-1929, no Americans were honored in chemistry, physiology, or medicine, but the Nobel prize in physics went to Robert Milliken in 1923 and to Arthur Compton (with the Englishman Charles Wilson) in 1927. Thereafter, U.S. scientists would receive about one of every three Nobel prizes in physiology, chemistry and medicine combined. The vitality of U.S. science was also found in the production of Ph.D. s in chemistry from 1921 to 1930. During this... [Pg.3]

Charles JM, Cunny HC, Wilson RD, et al Ames assays and unscheduled DNA synthesis assays on 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid and its derivatives. Mutat Res 444 207-16, 1999... [Pg.235]

Besides the development work earned out in Tubingen, Joachim Buddruss in Dortmund, Germany, as well as Harry Dorn in Blacksburg, USA and Charles Wilkins in Riverside, USA, have to be named as the first pioneers of on-line LC-NMR. Major applications employing LC-NMR have been performed by Tony Keller, Manfred Spraul, Ian Wilson, John Lindon, Jeremy Nicholson and Alfred Preiss. The nanoliter approach has been pioneered by Jonathan Swee-dler, Andrew Webb and Timothy Peck. [Pg.281]

The author salutes Charles E. Kupchella, Ph.D., the president of the University of North Dakota, Peter Alfonso, Ph.D., the vice president for research at the University of North Dakota, H. David Wilson, M.D., the dean and vice president for health affairs at the University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Joshua Wynne, M.D, M.B.A., M.P.H., the executive associate dean at University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, and Randy Eken, the associate dean for administration and finance at University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, for their confidence in the author s talent and supporting him whenever needed. [Pg.715]


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