Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Alexander Borodin" ¶ 19
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

chemist and Alexander
In 1924 in the UK the chemist Harold Plenderleith began to work at the British Museum with Dr. Alexander Scott in the newly created Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, thus giving birth to the conservation profession in the UK.
* 1997 – Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd, Scottish chemist, Nobel laureate ( b. 1907 )
* 1836 – Alexander Mitscherlich, German chemist ( d. 1918 )
* 1833 – Alexander Borodin, Russian composer and chemist ( d. 1887 )
In 1805, the French chemist Hippolyte Victor Collet-Descotils, backed by del Río's friend Baron Alexander von Humboldt, incorrectly declared that del Río's new element was only an impure sample of chromium.
** Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd, Scottish chemist, Nobel Prize laureate ( b. 1907 )
* February 4 – Alexander Imich, American parapsychologist and chemist
** Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd, Scottish chemist, Nobel Prize laureate ( d. 1997 )
** Alexander Mitscherlich, German chemist ( d. 1918 )
Alexander " Sasha " Theodore Shulgin ( born June 17, 1925 ) is an American pharmacologist, chemist, artist, author and drug developer.
* John Alexander Reina Newlands, chemist, was born in West Square in 1837.
Alexander Porfiryevich Borodin ( 12 November 1833 – 27 February 1887 ) was a Russian Romantic composer and chemist of Georgian – Russian parentage.
* Alexander Borodin ( 1833 – 1887 ), Russian composer and chemist
The name " kerogen " was introduced by the Scottish organic chemist Alexander Crum Brown in 1912.
John Alexander Reina Newlands ( 26 November 1837 – 29 July 1898 ) was an English chemist who worked on the discovery of the Periodic Table.
Other modern hallucinogens that some attempt to use for a similar purpose are ( D )- methorphan, LSD-25, substituted phenethylamines, substituted tryptamines, and substituted amphetamines such as those listed in the books PiHKAL and TiHKAL by Dr. Alexander Shulgin, a former analytical organic chemist.
* Theobromine is first discovered in cacao beans by Russian chemist Alexander Woskresensky.
* Alexander William Williamson ( 1824-1904 ), chemist who discovered the Williamson ether synthesis reaction
* Alexander Mikhaylovich Zaytsev ( 1841 – 1910 ), Russian chemist
Louis Alexander Slotin ( – ) was a Canadian physicist and chemist who took part in the Manhattan Project, the secret U. S. program during World War II that developed the atomic bomb.
* Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd, chemist
He was the half-brother of the organic chemist Alexander Crum Brown.
The hypothesis was first proposed by Georg Agricola in the 16th century and various abiogenic hypotheses were proposed in the 19th century, most notably by Alexander von Humboldt, the Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev and the French chemist Marcellin Berthelot.

chemist and Shulgin
Throughout the 1970s, the main source of information regarding the still legal MDMA came from independent research unaffiliated with traditionally scholarly settings led by the extensive self-experimentation performed by chemist Alexander Shulgin.
Several TMAs were first synthesized by the chemist Alexander Shulgin.
MBDB was first synthesized by David E. Nichols, a leading pharmacologist and medicinal chemist, and later tested by Alexander Shulgin and described in his book, PiHKAL: A Chemical Love Story.

chemist and uses
During World War II, Swedish chemist Björn Ingelman ( who worked for Arne Tiselius at Uppsala university ) researched various uses for the polysaccharide dextran.

chemist and name
The name " alkaloids " () was introduced in 1819 by the German chemist Carl F. W.
In 1804, the German chemist Friedrich Sertürner isolated from opium a " soporific principle " (), which he called " morphium " in honor of Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams ; in German and some other Central-European languages, this is still the name of the drug.
) Other sources claim that the French chemist and physicist Joseph-Louis Gay-Lussac suggested the name brôme for the characteristic smell of the vapors.
In 1809, the English chemist William Hyde Wollaston compared the oxides derived from both columbium — columbite, with a density 5. 918 g / cm < sup > 3 </ sup >, and tantalum — tantalite, with a density over 8 g / cm < sup > 3 </ sup >, and concluded that the two oxides, despite the significant difference in density, were identical ; thus he kept the name tantalum.
In 1926 the chemist Gilbert N. Lewis coined the name photon for these particles, and after 1927, when Arthur H. Compton won the Nobel Prize for his scattering studies, most scientists accepted the validity that quanta of light have an independent existence, and Lewis ' term photon for light quanta was accepted.
The name photon derives from the Greek word for light, ( transliterated phôs ), and was coined in 1926 by the physical chemist Gilbert Lewis, who published a speculative theory in which photons were " uncreatable and indestructible ".
The Berkeley / Livermore collaboration suggested the name seaborgium ( Sg ) to honor the American chemist Glenn T. Seaborg credited as a member of the American group in recognition of his participation in the discovery of several other actinides.
A civilian chemist working at the U. S. Naval Torpedo Station at Newport, Rhode Island, he noticed that when a block of explosive guncotton with the manufacturer's name stamped into it was detonated next to a metal plate, the lettering was cut into the plate.
In 1730, German chemist Frobenius gave this liquid its present name, ether, which is Greek for “ heavenly .” But 112 more years would pass before ether ’ s anesthetic powers were fully appreciated.
The American name of seaborgium for element 106 was also objectionable to some, because it referred to American chemist Glenn T. Seaborg who was still alive at the time this name was proposed.
French chemist Hippolyte Mège-Mouriès invented a substance he called oleomargarine, the name of which became shortened to the trade name " margarine ".
The suburb's name was derived from the farm name " Milton Farm ", used from the late 1840s by Ambrose Eldridge, chemist.
It was created by the German chemist Alfred Einhorn who gave the chemical the trade name Novocaine, from the Latin nov-( meaning new ) and-caine, a common ending for alkaloids used as anesthetics.
In the 1920s, Haas began to purchase peppermint oil from a chemist, and with it, he created in 1927 the small, flat, minty candy known as Pez ( the name was coined from " Pfefferminz ", the German word for peppermint ).
* Giovanni Demisiani-Greek theologian, chemist, mathematician, coined name " telescope "
Oskar Korschelt ( September 18, 1853 in Berthelsdorf-July 4, 1940 in Leipzig ; some sources erroneously give him the name Oscar or Otto ) was a German chemist and engineer who introduced the Asian strategy board game of Go to Europe, especially to Germany and Austria.
The name comes from chemist W. Petz, who first analyzed the mineral from the type locality in Săcărâmb, Transylvania, Romania in 1845.
Alexandre-Théophile Vandermonde ( 28 February 1735 – 1 January 1796 ) was a French musician, mathematician and chemist who worked with Bézout and Lavoisier ; his name is now principally associated with determinant theory in mathematics.
Revlon was founded in the midst of the Great Depression, 1932, by Charles Revson and his brother Joseph, along with a chemist, Charles Lachman, who contributed the " L " in the Revlon name.
* 1937 Swedish producer of coatings for fishing lines Berol is founded by fishing enthusiast Bernström and his friend Olson, a chemist, to make coatings to reinforce cotton fishing lines in Södertälje, and within a few years, Berol, whose name is derived from the first letters of the founders ' last names, is established as a manufacturer of water-proofing agents for shoes, leather jackets and sheepskin.

0.298 seconds.