WIEM: Smalley Richard E. smalley richard e. (1943), chemik amerykanski. Profesor w Rice Universityw Teksasie. Chemia, Stany Zjednoczone smalley richard e. (1943-). http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/0110d3.html
Extractions: Smalley Richard E. (1943-), chemik amerykañski. Profesor w Rice University w Teksasie. Do roku 1969 pracowa³ w Shell Chemical w New Jersey, nastêpnie odby³ studia doktoranckie w Princeton University. Zajmowa³ siê klasterami , nanoin¿ynieri±, badaniami spektroskopowymi cia³a sta³ego. Wraz z H. Levym i L. Whartonem rozwin±³ spektroskopiê laserow± ponadd¼wiêkowych strumieni gazu. W 1985, ze wspó³pracownikami, odkry³ i opisa³ cz±steczkê C Nagroda Nobla w dziedzinie chemii w 1996 (wraz z R. Curlem i H.W. Kroto WIEM zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry
Extractions: Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Noun Richard E. Smalley - American chemist who with Robert Curl and Harold Kroto discovered fullerenes and opened a new branch of chemistry (born in 1943) Richard Errett Smalley Richard Smalley Smalley chemist - a scientist who specializes in chemistry Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms Some words with "Richard E. Smalley" in the definition: Feynman
Extractions: Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Noun Richard Errett Smalley - American chemist who with Robert Curl and Harold Kroto discovered fullerenes and opened a new branch of chemistry (born in 1943) Richard E. Smalley Richard Smalley Smalley chemist - a scientist who specializes in chemistry Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms Some words with "Richard Errett Smalley" in the definition: Feynman
Richard E. Smalley - BlueRider.com richard e. smalley listen domain availability, richard e. smalley. Your searchresults search for richard_e._smalley on Google richard e. smalley n. http://richard_e._smalley.bluerider.com/wordsearch/richard_e._smalley
The Texas Twenty: Richard E. Smalley Richard E. Smalley. His discovery of the buckyball won him the Nobel prizeandthe admiration of researchers everywhere. by Gregory Curtis. http://www.texasmonthly.com/mag/1997/sep/tex20/smalley.php
Extractions: Smalley won the Nobel prize for his part in discovering the buckyball, an arrangement of sixty carbon atoms bound together in hexagons and pentagons that are themselves bound together. Depending on which comparison one prefers, the resulting molecule looks like either a soccer ball or a geodesic dome, the structure made popular by the late Buckminster Fuller (thus the name "buckyball"). Although Smalley won the Nobel only last year, he made his discovery twelve years ago, in 1985. Since then he has continued to work with fullerenes, carbon molecules similar in structure to the buckyball. All around the world, particularly in Europe and Japan, other scientists have begun research in this area; buckyballs inspired a whole new field of study. But Smalley, who was present at the creation, is once again breaking new ground. On July 26 of last year, in a paper he published in the journal Science Richard Smalley grew up in Kansas City, Missouri, where he was, in his own words, "an indifferent student." While many senior biographies in the 1961 Southwest High School yearbook are several paragraphs long, his consists of four words: "Honor roll two semesters." But Smalley fell under the spell of an inspiring chemistry teacher and headed off to tiny Hope College in Michigan intent on majoring in chemistry. His intellectual abilities blossomed there, and eventually he earned a doctorate from Princeton University. After postdoctoral work at the University of Chicago, he hired on at Rice in 1976, and he has been there ever since.
Extractions: Read More Testimony before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources: Hearing on Sustainable, Low-Emission Electricity Generation; Washington, D.C., 27 April, 2004 ( PDF "Our Energy Challenge," Livability Summit, Phoenix, AZ; April 22, 2004 ( PDF "Our Energy Challenge," Public Lecture, Low Library, Columbia University,New York, NY; September 23, 2003 ( PPT PDF VIDEO "Be a Scientist, Save the World," School of Choice, Spring Branch ISD; September 2, 2003 ( PPT PDF "Our Energy Challenge," ACS-AICHE; Sept 8, 2003 ( PPT "Our Energy Challenge," Iran Thomas Symposium; May 29,2003 ( PDF PDF "Our Energy Challenge," Cultures of Creativity, Houston Museum of Natural Science, Houston, Texas; April 22, 2003 ( PDF "NANOTECHNOLOGY, the S&T Workforce, ENERGY & Prosperity." PCAST, Washington, D.C.; March 3, 2003 (
Richard E. Smalley - Autobiography richard E. smalley Autobiography. I was born in Akron, Ohio on June 6,1943, one year to the day before DDay, the allied invasion at Normandy. http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1996/smalley-autobio.html
Extractions: I was born in Akron, Ohio on June 6, 1943, one year to the day before D-Day, the allied invasion at Normandy. The youngest of four children, I was brought up in a wonderfully stable, loving family of strong Midwestern values. When I was three my family moved to Kansas City, Missouri where we lived in a beautiful large home in a lovely upper-middle class neighborhood. I grew up there (at least to the extent one can be considered to be grown up on leaving for college at age 18) and was convinced that Kansas City, Missouri was the exact center of the known universe. My mother, Esther Virginia Rhoads, was the third of six children of Charlotte Kraft and Errett Stanley Rhoads, a wealthy manufacturer of furniture in the Kansas City area. She liked the unusual name Errett so much that she gave it to me as my middle name. She picked the name Richard after the crusading English king (the Lion-Hearted), but being a good American and suitably suspicious of royalty, she was fond of calling me "Mr. President" instead. She had big plans for me, and loved me beyond all reason. My father, Frank Dudley Smalley, Jr., was the second of four children born to Mary Rice Burkholder and Frank Dudley Smalley (Sr.), a railroad mail clerk in Kansas City. Although my father went by the name of June (short for Junior), he never quite forgave his father for not having given him a name of his own, and for not having aspired to more in life. My father started work as a carpenter, and then as a printer's devil, working for the local newspaper
Smalley, Richard E(rret) smalley, richard E., in full richard ERRET smalley (b. June 6, 1943, Akron, Oh or buckyball) and the fullerenes. smalley received a doctorate from Princeton University in 1973 http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/732_91.html
Extractions: in full RICHARD ERRET SMALLEY (b. June 6, 1943, Akron, Oh., U.S.), American chemist and physicist who shared the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry with Robert F. Curl, Jr. , and Sir Harold W. Kroto for their discovery of carbon (C , or buckminsterfullerene, or buckyball) and the fullerenes Smalley received a doctorate from Princeton University in 1973. After postdoctoral work at the University of Chicago, Smalley began his teaching career at Rice University, Houston, Texas, in 1976. He was named Gene and Norman Hackerman professor of chemistry in 1982 and became a professor of physics in 1990. It was at Rice University that Smalley and his colleagues discovered fullerenes, the third known form of crystal carbon (diamond and graphite are the other two known forms). The atoms of fullerenes are arranged in a closed shell. Carbon is the smallest stable fullerene molecule, consisting of 60 carbon atoms fit together to form a cage, with the bonds resembling the pattern of seams on a soccer ball. The molecule was given the name buckminsterfullerene because its shape is similar to the geodesic domes designed by the American architect and theorist R. Buckminster Fuller.
Chemistry 1996 Robert F. Curl Jr. Sir Harold W. Kroto, richard E. smalley. richard E. smalleyAutobiography Nobel Lecture Other Resources. prev 1995, 1997 next. http://www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1996/
Richard E. Smalley, Buckminsterfullerene (the Buckyball), And Nanotubes Dr. richard smalley won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery of a fullerenes called Buckminsterfullerene (nicknamed richard E. smalley, with funding from the Department of Energy (DOE) http://www.osti.gov/accomplishments/smalley.html
Extractions: Prof. Richard Smalley Resources with Additional Information Richard E. Smalley, with funding from the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES) , has conducted extensive research in cluster chemistry and in cold ion beam technology and is currently involved in research in nanotube single-crystal growth. Smalley was born June 6, 1943, received a B.S. degree from the University of Michigan in 1965, and received a Ph.D. from Princeton in 1973. He began work at Rice University in 1976 and became a Professor in the Department of Physics in January 1990. In 1996, Dr. Smalley was appointed Director of the Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology (CNST) at Rice University. Current DOE-funded research by The Smalley Group focuses on nanotube single crystal growth Buckminsterfullerene Richard Smalley has won many awards, including the 1992 E.O. Lawrence Award and the 1996
C&EN: COVER STORY - NANOTECHNOLOGY richard E. smalley, University Professor and professor of chemistry, physics, and astronomy at Much of smalley's current research focuses on the chemistry, physics, and potential http://pubs.acs.org/cen/coverstory/8148/8148counterpoint.html
Extractions: Drexler and Smalley make the case for and against 'molecular assemblers' RUDY BAUM PHOTO BY RUDY BAUM PHOTO BY LINDA CICERO OPEN DEBATE Rice University's Smalley (left) takes issue with mechanosynthesis and molecular manufacturing as set forth by Foresight Institute's Drexler. I n this C&EN exclusive "Point-Counterpoint," two of nanotechnology's biggest advocates square off on a fundamental question that will dramatically affect the future development of this field. Are "molecular assemblers"devices capable of positioning atoms and molecules for precisely defined reactions in almost any environmentphysically possible? In his landmark 1986 book, " Engines of Creation: The Coming Era of Nanotechnology ," K. Eric Drexler envisioned a world utterly transformed by such assemblers. They would be able to build anything with absolute precision and no pollution. They would confer something approaching immortality. They would enable the colonization of the solar system.
Rice University >> Chemistry Department >> Faculty richard E. smalley. Gene and Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Physics richard E. smalley Birth Date June 6, 1943 U.S. Citizen Children Chad R. smalley (born http://www.chem.rice.edu/CHEM_faculty_dtl.cfm?FDSID=437
Richard Smalley Winner Of The 1996 Nobel Prize In Chemistry richard smalley, a Nobel Prize Laureate in Chemistry, at the Nobel Prize Internet Archive. richard E. smalley. 1996 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry smalley's home page at Rice University. richard http://www.almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/1996c.html
Extractions: Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors "Science of Fullerenes and Carbon Nanotubes" by M.S. Dresselhaus, G. Dresselhaus, and P. Eklund USB Buckyball Homepage - Research on Fullerenes (submitted by Dr. Michael C. Martin Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology (submitted by Daniel T. Colbert
The Smalley Group - Rice University richard E. smalley. University Professor, Gene and Norman HackermanProfessor of Chemistry and Professor 2003 richard E. smalley. http://smalley.rice.edu/index.php?topgroupid=1&groupid=16
Extractions: Read More Testimony before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources: Hearing on Sustainable, Low-Emission Electricity Generation; Washington, D.C., 27 April, 2004 ( PDF "Our Energy Challenge," Livability Summit, Phoenix, AZ; April 22, 2004 ( PDF "Our Energy Challenge," Public Lecture, Low Library, Columbia University,New York, NY; September 23, 2003 ( PPT PDF VIDEO "Be a Scientist, Save the World," School of Choice, Spring Branch ISD; September 2, 2003 ( PPT PDF "Our Energy Challenge," ACS-AICHE; Sept 8, 2003 ( PPT "Our Energy Challenge," Iran Thomas Symposium; May 29,2003 ( PDF PDF "Our Energy Challenge," Cultures of Creativity, Houston Museum of Natural Science, Houston, Texas; April 22, 2003 ( PDF "NANOTECHNOLOGY, the S&T Workforce, ENERGY & Prosperity." PCAST, Washington, D.C.; March 3, 2003 (
Richard Smalley Winner Of The 1996 Nobel Prize In Chemistry richard E. smalley. smalley s home page at Rice University; richard E. smalley sCurriculum Vitae; 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry announcement and background; http://almaz.com/nobel/chemistry/1996c.html
Extractions: Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors "Science of Fullerenes and Carbon Nanotubes" by M.S. Dresselhaus, G. Dresselhaus, and P. Eklund USB Buckyball Homepage - Research on Fullerenes (submitted by Dr. Michael C. Martin Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology (submitted by Daniel T. Colbert
Richard E. Smalley -- Encyclopædia Britannica smalley, richard E. Encyclopædia Britannica Article. richard E. smalley. To citethis page MLA style richard E. smalley. Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=101869&tocid=0&query=robert f. curl, jr.
Smalley, Richard E. Search Biographies Bio search tips smalley, richard E. http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0301537.html
Smalley, Richard E smalley, richard E (1943). I was born in Akron, Ohio on June 6, 1943,one year to the day before D-Day, the allied invasion at Normandy. http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/S/Smalley/1.html
Extractions: Smalley, Richard E I was born in Akron, Ohio on June 6, 1943, one year to the day before D-Day, the allied invasion at Normandy. The youngest of four children, I was brought up in a wonderfully stable, loving family of strong Midwestern values. When I was three my family moved to Kansas City, Missouri where we lived in a beautiful large home in a lovely upper-middle class neighborhood. I grew up there (at least to the extent one can be considered to be grown up on leaving for college at age 18) and was convinced that Kansas City, Missouri was the exact center of the known universe. My mother, Esther Virginia Rhoads, was the third of six children of Charlotte Kraft and Errett Stanley Rhoads, a wealthy manufacturer of furniture in the Kansas City area. She liked the unusual name Errett so much that she gave it to me as my middle name. She picked the name Richard after the crusading English king (the Lion-Hearted), but being a good American and suitably suspicious of royalty, she was fond of calling me "Mr. President" instead. She had big plans for me, and loved me beyond all reason. My father, Frank Dudley Smalley, Jr., was the second of four children born to Mary Rice Burkholder and Frank Dudley Smalley (Sr.), a railroad mail clerk in Kansas City. Although my father went by the name of June (short for Junior), he never quite forgave his father for not having given him a name of his own, and for not having aspired to more in life. My father started work as a carpenter, and then as a printer's devil, working for the local newspaper
Carbon Nanotechnologies Incorporated - Information Fact Sheet - of CNI chairman and Nobel laureate richard smalley. The company has formed Incorporated information, Carbon Nanotechnologies Incorporated research, richard E. ( Rick) smalley Bob G http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://na.link.decdna.net/n/7972/7974/www.hoove