Bio.Hideki Shirakawa Hideki Shirakawa. Dr. Hideki Shirakawa was born in Tokyo on August 20, 1936. He received his BS, MS, and Ph.D from Tokyo Institute of Technology in 1961, 1963, and 1966, respectively. http://www.jspsusa.org/FORUM2001/bio.Shirakawa.htm
Hideki Shirakawa Hideki Shirakawa University of Tsukuba, Japan. Professor EmeirtusSHIRAKAWA, who retired from the univeristy this spring, has won http://www.punjabilok.com/science/shirakawa.htm
Extractions: University of Tsukuba, Japan Professor Emeirtus SHIRAKAWA, who retired from the univeristy this spring, has won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 2000, with Dr. Heeger (Prof. of physics at the Univ. of California, Santa Barbara) and Dr. MacDiarmid (Prof. of chemistry at the Univ. of Pennsylvania) for the discovery and development of conductive polymers.
UCLA EAS: Japan Via The Web UCL of Ôe's works is the Calendar of Authors. shirakawa hideki 2000 Nobel Prize Winner in Chemistry to receive a Nobel Prize, Shirakawa is a professor at Tsukuba University http://www.isop.ucla.edu/eas/web/japanweb.htm
Extractions: UCLA Asia Institute Japan via the Web Academic Organizations America and Japan Art Biography ... Tea and Tea Rituals Academic Organizations FAJ (Foreign Academics in Japan) Project Issho Kikaku, Japan Institute of Social Science, Tokyo University Includes links to the institute's online journal: Social Science Japan Japan Exchange and Teaching Programme (JET) This is a well-known program permitting students and teachers the opportunity to study and work in Japan. Japan Foundation Japanese Studies Programs The Foundation offers both individual fellowships and support for institutions. Japan Information Access Project This is a US based research center's directory of information about science, technology, industry, security and public policy. Japan Policy Research Institute This think tank is headed by Chalmers Johnson, who has written on MITI and other topics (and, much earlier, on Chinese peasant nationalism). Social Science Research Council Administered Programs Postdoctoral Programs for Advanced Research in Japan Japanese Studies Dissertation Workshop (annual event, held in the U.S.) America and Japan American Movies in Japan This site features weekly updates on which US films are being exhibited in Japan and how they fare at the box office.
Shirakawa.html . shirakawa hideki ? . F?425. mail hideki@ims.tsukuba.ac.jp. http://www.ims.tsukuba.ac.jp/individual/shirakawa.html
Shirakawa Hideki Shirakawa b. August 20, 1936, Tokyo, Japan. Hideki Shirakawa shared aNobel Prize 2000 in Chemistry with Alan J. Heeger and Alan G. MacDiarmid. http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/~eugeniik/history/shirakawa.htm
Extractions: Hideki Shirakawa, co-discoverer of the field of conducting polymers, more commonly known as "synthetic metals," was the chemist responsible in 1977 for the chemical and electrochemical doping of polyacetylene, (CH) x , the "prototype" conducting polymer. Hideki Shirakawa shared a Nobel Prize 2000 in Chemistry with Alan J. Heeger and Alan G. MacDiarmid. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the prize to the three for the discovery and development of conductive polymers. Hideki Shirakawa was born in Tokyo on August 20, 1936. After graduating from the Tokyo Institute of Technology with a degree in chemical engineering in 1961, he enrolled in the graduate program there and received his doctorate in engineering in 1966. He subsequently worked as an assistant at the Chemical Resources Laboratory at his alma mater until 1976, when he went to the University of Pennsylvania in the United States as a researcher. Three years later he returned to Japan, joining the faculty of the University of Tsukuba as an associate professor. In 1982 he became a professor, and in April 2000 he was appointed professor emeritus. In 1983 he received the Award of the Society of Polymer Science, Japan, for his research into polyacetylene. Hideki Shirakawa, a 64-year-old professor emeritus at the University of Tsukuba, has been named the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2000. The prize was presented jointly to Shirakawa and two U.S. scientists - Alan Heeger, 64, of the University of California at Santa Barbara and Alan MacDiarmid, 73, of the University of Pennsylvania - for their discovery and development of conductive polymers, or plastics that can transmit electric current. Shirakawa is the ninth Japanese to become a Nobel laureate and the first since Kenzaburo Oe, who won the prize for literature in 1994. He is the second Japanese to receive the chemistry award. The first was the late Ken'ichi Fukui, who won it in 1981.
WIEM: Shirakawa Hideki shirakawa hideki (1936), japonski chemik, emerytowany profesor chemii w InstytucieTechnologii Materialowych na Uniwersytecie w Tsukuba. W 1975 http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/01584c.html
Extractions: Shirakawa Hideki (1936-), japoñski chemik, emerytowany profesor chemii w Instytucie Technologii Materia³owych na Uniwersytecie w Tsukuba. W 1975 dokona³ polimeryzacji acetylenu , otrzymuj±c w ten sposób poliacetylen, organiczny polimer przewodz±cy pr±d elektryczny. Odkrycie to nast±pi³o przypadkiem, gdy uczony do syntezy tego polimeru doda³ tysi±ckrotnie wiêcej katalizatora , uzyskuj±c w ten sposób srebrzyst± substancjê o cechach przewy¿szaj±cych niektóre cechy metali. W 2000 wraz z A. G. MacDiarmidem i A. J. Heegerem otrzyma³ Nagrodê Nobla w dziedzinie chemii za opracowanie tworzywa sztucznego przewodz±cego pr±d. WIEM zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry
Hideki Shirakawa - Wikipedia Hideki Shirakawa. Från Wikipedia, den fria encyklopedin. Hideki Shirakawa. Född 1936 i Tokyo. Japansk Nobelpristagare i kemi år 2000. http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hideki_Shirakawa
Extractions: Hideki Shirakawa . Född i Tokyo. Japansk Nobelpristagare i kemi år . Han tilldelades priset för " upptäckten och utvecklandet av ledande polymerer ".Han delade priset med med amerikanarna Alan Heeger och Alan G MacDiarmid Efter grundläggande teknisk utbildning vid Tokyo Institute of Technology tillbringade han åren 1976 - 1979 vid University of Pennsylvania i USA. Han återvände sedan till Japan där han nu är professor i kemi vid "Institute of Materials Science", University of Tsukuba, Japan (från april år 2000 professor emeritus). Vanligtvis leder plaster inte elektrisk ström. I själva verket används plast just som isolering kring koppartrådarna i vanliga elsladdar. Det har dock visat sig vara möjligt att göra vissa plaster elektriskt ledande. Plaster är polymerer , molekyler som upprepar sin struktur regelbundet i långa kedjor. För att en polymer ska kunna leda elektrisk ström måste den bestå av omväxlande enkel- och dubbelbindningar mellan kolatomerna . Den måste också "dopas", vilket innebär att man plockar bort elektroner (genom oxidation ) eller för in extra elektroner (genom reduktion ). Dessa "hål" eller extra elektroner kan röra sig längs polymerkedjan - den blir elektriskt ledande.
Hideki Shirakawa Hideki Shirakawa. 1936 Born in Japan 1966 Ph.D., Tokyo Institute ofTechnology 1966 Research Associate, Tokyo Institute of Technology http://www.pol.chalmers.se/Pages/nobellect/tsld007.htm
HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results Noyori will give one on April 4, and Hideki Shirakawa, a Nobel prize winnerin 27. Noyori Ryoji and shirakawa hideki Prior to Koshiba http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesauru
Nobel Deeds Noyori Ryoji and shirakawa hideki. Prior to Koshiba and Tanaka, Dr.Noyori Ryoji and Dr. shirakawa hideki won the Nobel Prize for http://www.lookjapan.com/LBst/03AprST.htm
The Industrial Instruments Of Scientific Success Examples include the research of shirakawa hideki, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistryin 2000, and that of Noyori Ryoji, who won the same prize the following http://www.lookjapan.com/LBecobiz/03AprEF.htm
Alan G. MacDiarmid -- Encyclopædia Britannica New Zealandborn American chemist who, with Alan J. Heeger and shirakawa hideki,was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2000 for their discovery that http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=409101
Alan J. Heeger -- Encyclopædia Britannica American chemist who, with Alan G. MacDiarmid and shirakawa hideki, won the NobelPrize for Chemistry in 2000 for their discovery that certain plastics can be http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=409104&tocid=0&query=california universi
Japanese Heading For Grand Name Change such as Japanese chemist Hideki Shirakawa, who shared this year s Nobel prize inchemistry, could find his name written in the future as shirakawa hideki. http://app1.chinadaily.com.cn/star/2000/1215/fe11-2.html
Extractions: Japanese heading for grand name change Shanghai Star. 2000-12-15 JAPAN'S government may be sending a memo to most of the world in the next few years saying that every Japanese national has changed his or her name. A Japanese Government panel recommended it's time to end a double standard for Japanese names since the country dramatically expanded its contact with the rest of the world more than a century ago, according to weekend reports in local dailies. In Japan, names are listed with the family name first and the given name last. In most other countries, Japanese have reversed the order, putting the given name first and the family name last, to reflect the traditions in many parts of the world. The panel wants Japanese to use the same order at home and abroad, with the family name first in foreign languages. Chinese and people from both Republic of Korea (ROK) and Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) do not change when overseas. The family name comes first for ROK President Kim Dae-jung and Chinese President Jiang Zemin, the panel pointed out. Japanese should follow the lead of their Asian neighbours and keep the custom of family names first in overseas contacts, the Council on National Language said in a report.
Asiaweek.com | A Question Of Pride | 10/27/2000 The third laureate from the region was shirakawa hideki of Japan s University ofTsukuba who won the chemistry prize for his work on developing conductive http://www.asiaweek.com/asiaweek/magazine/2000/1027/nat.noble_award.html
Extractions: In Gao Xingjian's play Bus Stop, frustrated commuters wait ten years for a vehicle that never pulls in. The victory bus finally arrived for Gao himself last week when he was named this year's recipient of the Nobel Prize for literature. The first Chinese writer to win the prestigious award, Paris-based Gao had been on the shortlist for some years, though the dissident writer's selection was still a big surprise. More prominent Chinese figures acceptable to Beijing had been considered better bets. Some of Gao's rivals were positively peeved. Red Sorghum author Mo Yan hung up when Asiaweek phoned for a reaction. He answered a second call with a "no comment." For the first time, Asia is celebrating three Nobel prizes in the same year. The trio was capped on Oct. 13 when the Nobel committee in Oslo announced that after 14 consecutive nominations, South Korean President Kim Dae Jung had finally won the peace prize for his commitment to democracy, human rights and reconciliation with the Communist North. With Gao, that put two anti-establishment figures on the Nobel honor roll, international recognition that reform and the defense of liberty have become Asia's new touchstones. The third laureate from the region was Shirakawa Hideki of Japan's University of Tsukuba who won the chemistry prize for his work on developing conductive plastics.
Réponses(s) Translate this page la conductivité shirakawa hideki Chimiste japonais (Tokyo, 1936).ShirakawaHideki est professeur de chimie MacDiarmid (Alan http://encyclo.voila.fr/s?str=conducteur