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         Calvin Melvin:     more books (72)
  1. Chemical evolution of life and sensibility by Melvin Calvin, 1966
  2. Fermentation and hydrocarbons by Melvin Calvin, 1978
  3. Foundations of Space Biology and Space Medicine: Joint USA/USSR Publication in 3 Volumes by Melvin Calvin and Oleg G. Gazenko, 1975-01-01
  4. Chemistry of the Metal Chelate Compounds (Prentice-Hall Chemistry Series) by Arthur E.; Calvin, Melvin Martell, 1956
  5. Chemistry, population, resources by Melvin Calvin, 1977
  6. Hydrocarbons via photosynthesis (Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. LBL) by Melvin Calvin, 1977
  7. Foundations of Space Biology and Space Medicine: Joint USA/USSR Publication in 3 Volumes by Melvin Calvin and Oleg G. Gazenko, 1975-01-01
  8. Comments on "Contribution to the problem of carotinoid function in photosynthesis" R.Y. Stainer et al: For publication in Nature by Melvin Calvin, 1955
  9. Renewable fuels for the future (Extension bulletin / ASPAC, Food & Fertilizer Technology Center) by Melvin Calvin, 1984
  10. The photosynthetic cycle by Melvin Calvin, 1955
  11. Origin of life on earth and elsewhere: [pt.I]-II (U.S. Atomic Energy Commission) by Melvin Calvin, 1959
  12. Foundations of Space Biology and Medicine. Volume II: Parts 1 and 2. Ecological by Melvin and Oleg G. Gazenko (editors) Calvin, 1975-01-01
  13. Gilbert Newton Lewis by Melvin Calvin, 1976
  14. Foundations of Space Biology and Medicine Vol. II (2): Ecological and Physiologi by Melvin (USA) and Gazenko, Oleg G. (USSR) Calvin, 1975-01-01

61. AldeaEducativa.com | Contenidos Y Consultas Educativas
Translate this page geofísica, y otras ramas de la ciencia. Universidad de California.Los Angeles, CA, Estados Unidos. Premio nobel 1961. calvin, melvin.
http://www.aldeaeducativa.com/aldea/Nobel1b.asp?Which=Ambiente

62. Calvin, Melvin
calvin, melvin. US chemist who was awarded the nobel Prize for Chemistryin 1961 for his study of the assimilation of carbon dioxide by plants.
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0016708.html
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HUTCHINSON ENCYCLOPEDIA Calvin, Melvin US chemist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1961 for his study of the assimilation of carbon dioxide by plants. Using radioactive carbon-14 as a tracer, he determined the biochemical processes of photosynthesis , in which green plants use chlorophyll to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugar and oxygen.
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63. Nobel Prize Winners In Chemistry Since1901
Adolf Butenandts. Theodore William Richards, melvin calvin. Gertrude B. Elion,Marie Curie. Dorothy C. Hodgkin. nobel Prize Winners in Chemistry 19011999.
http://iweb.tntech.edu/chem491-dc/prizewinners.htm
Excluded Subjects for Fall 2000
ROBERT S. MULLIKEN Sidney Altman Ernest Rutherford Sherwood Roland Willard Frank Libby George Wittig Frederick Sanger VINCENT DU VIGNEAUD Kary Mullis William Ramsay Alexander Todd Irving Langmuir Hermann Staudinger Vlademir Prelog Jerome Karle Adolf Butenandts Theodore William Richards Melvin Calvin Gertrude B. Elion Marie Curie Dorothy C. Hodgkin
Nobel Prize Winners in Chemistry 1901-1999
1999 - The prize was awarded for studies of the transition states of chemical reactions using femtosecond spectrscopy.
  • AHMED ZEWAIL
- The prize was awarded for pioneering contributions in developing methods that can be used for theoretical studies of the properties of molecules and the chemical processes in which they are involved. The prize was divided equally between:
  • WALTER KOHN for his development of the density-functional theory and JOHN A. POPLE for his development of computational methods in quantum chemistry.
- The prize was divided, one half being awarded jointly to:

64. Fleming Appointed To Calvin Chair
The melvin calvin Distinguished Professorship honors the late Professor calvin Professorcalvin was a University Professor and received the nobel Prize in
http://www.cchem.berkeley.edu/editor/Publications/news/spring2002/calvinchair.ht
College of Chemistry, Berkeley
Chemi CAL Science and Engineering
News
Graham Fleming Appointed to the Melvin Calvin Distinguished Professorship
Graham Fleming
has been appointed the first holder of the recently established Melvin Calvin Distinguished Professorship in the department of chemistry. This professorship was created with the intent that it be held by a scientist of exceptional caliber and achievement who has made major contributions to advancing chemical biodynamics or related fields. Fleming's appointment is effective from January 2002 through June 2006. Professor Fleming and his group study dynamic processes in a range of complex systems, such as liquids, solutions and proteins. A particular focus of his research is the primary steps of photosynthesis. Their major experimental tool is femtosecond spectroscopy,

65. Melvin Calvin
Translate this page melvin calvin (1911 - 1997 En 1961 obtuvo el Premio nobel de Química por sus quinceaños de investigaciones sobre la serie de reacciones conocidas como ciclo
http://es.geocities.com/fisicas/cientificos/quimicos/melvin_calvin.htm
Melvin CALVIN (1911 - 1997)
(1941) y
http://es.geocities.com/fisicas/
Los autores: e fisicas@yahoo.es

66. What Physicists Do--History
The more than 700 speakers have included. twelve nobel Prize winners Felix Bloch,Emilio Segré, Owen Chamberlain, melvin calvin, Arthur Schawlow, William Fowler.
http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/wpd/wpdHistory.html
The Sonoma State University
Department of Physics and Astronomy
presents a series of lectures, demonstrations, and films
WHAT PHYSICISTS DO
Physics is what physicists do late at night
THE COMPLETE LIST
Current Series
The Department of Physics and Astronomy has presented the "What Physicists Do" series each semester since Spring 1971. The entire history of the series may be browsed or searched on these pages. The more than 700 speakers have included twelve Nobel Prize winners: Felix
Bloch
Emilio
Owen
...
Kroemer
two Crafoord Prize winners: Allan Sandage Edwin Salpeter nine recipients of the National Medal of Science W. K. H. Panofsky Calvin Quate Vera Rubin ... Darleane Hoffman six MacArthur Fellows Robert Shaw Raymond Jeanloz Douglas Osheroff ... Margaret Murnane four Bruce Medalists Donald Osterbrock Allan Sandage William Fowler ... Edwin Salpeter and a great many other outstanding scientists and engineers. Please send comments, additions, corrections, and questions to
joe.tenn@sonoma.edu

JST

67. People Who Made Photosynthesis Known
They created a cycle to explain the process to others and named it The calvinCycle. In 1961, melvin calvin won a nobel prize for chemistry.
http://warrensburg.k12.mo.us/ew/photosynth/megan.html
People who made Photosynthesis Known Megan Maness There are a lot of people who helped or made photosynthesis known. One of the most famous people was Melvin Calvin. Melvin and one of his assistants, A. A. Benson, were the first to realize that carbon 14 could not unravel the mystery of photosynthesis. After that in 1948, Calvin and Benson began doing experiments using algae. They created a cycle to explain the process to others and named it The Calvin Cycle. In 1961, Melvin Calvin won a Nobel prize for chemistry. You are probably tired of hearing of Melvin Calvin, so I will tell you about some of the other people who also made photosynthesis famous. Philip Hauge Abelsone made replicas of some of the proteins found in oxygen. In the 1920's, an English biochemist, John B. S. Haldane, pointed out " that if life was responsible for the oxygen in the atmosphere, photosynthesis ought to have started when there was no oxygen in it and carbon dioxide was present instead." R. Emerson and W. Arnold illuminated plant cells with very short flashes of light. Stephen Hales, an English botanist, thought that since plants could give off gasses, it seemed to him they could also take in gasses. Joseph Black was interested in carbon dioxide. I'm still not done with these people yet. Jean Baptiste Boussingault was the first to conduct experiments to study the part that nitrogen played in photosynthesis in 1837. John Dalton named the atoms and then decided that atoms that cling together form molecules. Six carbon atoms, twelve hydrogen atoms, and six oxygen atoms is what Rudolf Fittig found in glucose. In 1870, a German chemist, Adolf Baeyer decided photosynthesis should form formaldehyde.

68. Merck Lecturers
Ertman, GA. 195556. Karl Folkers Lecturer. calvin, melvin. 1956-57. KarlFolkers Lecturer. nobel Prize 1961. Prelog, W. 1956-57. Karl Folkers Lecturer.
http://www.chem.wisc.edu/areas/organic/seminars/merck-lecturers.htm
Lecturerships in Organic Chemistry
Ziegler, Karl Karl Folkers Lecturer Nobel Prize 1963 Robinson, Sir Robert Karl Folkers Lecturer Nobel Prize 1947 Ertman, G. A. Karl Folkers Lecturer Calvin, Melvin Karl Folkers Lecturer Nobel Prize 1961 Prelog, W. Karl Folkers Lecturer Nobel Prize 1975 Jones, E. R. H. Karl Folkers Lecturer Barton, D. H. Karl Folkers Lecturer Nobel Prize 1969 Wittig, George James Sprague Lecturer
Nobel Prize 1979 Eschenmoser, A. Karl Folkers Lecturer Lynen, Feodor Karl Folkers Lecturer Muxfeldt, Hans Karl Folkers Lecturer van Tamelen, E. Karl Folkers Lecturer Winstein, Saul James Sprague Lecturer Westheimer, Frank Karl Folkers Lecturer Buchi, George Karl Folkers Lecturer Heilbronner, Edgar James Sprague Lecturer Scott, A. L. Karl Folkers Lecturer von Doering, William James Sprague Lecturer Buchi, George H. Karl Folkers Lecturer Bartlett, Paul D. James Sprague Lecturer Nakanishi, K. Karl Folkers Lecturer Roberts, John D. James Sprague Lecturer Breslow, Ronald Karl Folkers Lecturer Hammond, George S. James Sprague Lecturer Corey, E. J. Karl Folkers Lecturer Nobel Prize 1990 Arigoni, Diulio

69. Ziegler, Karl 1952-53 Nobel Prize 1963 Robinson, Sir Robert 1953
Robinson, Sir Robert. 195354. nobel Prize 1947. Ertman, GA. 1955-56. calvin, melvin.1956-57. nobel Prize 1961. Prelog, W. 1956-57. nobel Prize 1975. Jones, ERH. 1956-57.
http://www.chem.wisc.edu/areas/organic/seminars/merck-folkers.htm
Folkers Lectureship
The Folkers Lectureship was initially established in 1951 by Karl Folkers with funds from a Merck Board of Directors' Scientific Award (a program which honors especially valued scientific leaders within the Merck Pharmaceutical Company) Karl Folkers Karl Folkers received his B.S. at the University of Illinois with Speed Marvel in 1928, and his Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin, Madison with Homer Atkins in 1931. Folkers then did three years of postdoctoral research with Treat B. Johnson at Yale University. He joined the Merck Laboratories in 1934, and began a distinguished career in the area of vitamins and other medicinally important natural products (alkaloids, antibiotics, hormones). His most recognized contribution in the Vitamin area was the isolation in pure form of the pernicious anemia factor, which he called Vitamin B (later named cyanocobalamine when the full structure was determined by single crystal X-Ray diffraction), and which subsequently became important for both human and animal nutrition. This work became possible because of the then new technique of column chromatography which permitted purification of very small amounts of the red cyanocobalamine. He is also known for his synthesis of Vitamin B (pyridoxine) and much work on the health consequences of widespread Vitamin B deficiency (including Carpal Tunnel Syndrome and Chinese Restaurant Syndrome). His research groups at Merck, SRI and U. of Austin also carried out extensive studies on biological electron transfer, focussed on Vitamin Q

70. The Autograph Collectors Gallery HIS 4 Melvin Calvin
HIS 4 melvin calvin American chemist He won the nobel Prize for chemistryin 1961. 10x8 signed portrait Price £12.00. Autograph
http://www.autograph-gallery.co.uk/acatalog/HIS_4_Melvin_Calvin.html
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71. Melvin Calvin
Translate this page melvin calvin (1911-1997) melvin calvin Químico y premio nobel estadounidense Nacióel 8 de abril de 1911 en el seno de una familia de inmigrantes rusos en
http://bios.euroritmo.com/default.aspx?personaje=Melvin Calvin

72. Cronoloxía De Feitos Na Química
Translate this page 1961. melvin calvin é recoñecido co premio nobel pola súa investigaciónna asimilación do dióxido de carbono nas plantas. Comeza
http://web.usc.es/~qimaneir/files/crono.htm
CRONOLOXÍA DOS FEITOS HISTÓRICOS MÁIS RELEVANTES DA QUÍMICA MODERNA A nivel galego
A nivel mundial

Henry Cavendish xera hidróxeno ("ar inflamable") ó tratar algúns metais con ácidos fortes. Joseph Priestley obtén osíxeno libre ó quentar HgO. Previamente Carl Wilhelm Scheele xa o obtivera en 1771-72, aínda que non publicaría os seus resultados ata 1777. Antoine Lavoisier Os experimentos de Antoine Lavoisier determinan o derrube da teoría do floxisto. O profesor Francisco Neira convence ó Claustro da USC da importancia e da necesidade do ensino das novas ciencias experimentais (física, química, botánica, etc.) para acadar unha mellor instrucción dos médicos.
Antoine Lavoisier , despois de postular a lei de conservación da materia, publica o "Traité elémentaire de chimie", onde presenta a base da nomenclatura química moderna.
John Dalton propón a lei da composición constante (ou das proporcións definidas) para as substancias químicas.

73. ClubCaminantes - Premios Nobel - Quimica, El Club De Los Caminantes
Translate this page PREMIOS nobel, QUÍMICA. 1901-1925 1926-1950 1951-1975 1976-2000 1951. LosAngeles, CA, Estados Unidos. 1961. calvin, melvin (Estados Unidos).
http://caminantes.metropoliglobal.com/web/nobel/quimica3.htm

Inicio
Foros Chat Top 10 ... PREMIOS NOBEL
McMillan, Edwin M. (Estados Unidos) Por su descubrimiento en la química de los elementos transuranidos. Universidad de California. Berkeley, CA, Estados Unidos Seaborg, Glenn T. (Estados Unidos) Por su descubrimiento en la química de los elementos transuranidos. Universidad de California. Berkeley, CA, Estados Unidos
Martin, Archer John P. Por su invención de la cromatografía de partición. Instituto Nacional para la Investigación Médica. Londres, Gran Bretaña Synge, Richard L.M. Por su invención de la cromatografía de partición. Instituto de Investigación Rowet. Bucksburn, Escocia
Staudinger, Hermann (Alemania) Por su descubrimientos en el campo de la química macromolecular. Universidad de Freiburg. Breisgau, Alemania. Instituto de Estadística para la Química macromolecular
Pauling, Linus

74. Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society: Nobel Laureates
About Sigma Xi » Overview » nobel Laureates C. Pauling 1958 Frederick Sanger 1959Jaroslav Heyrovsky 1960 Willard F. Libby 1961 melvin calvin 1965 Robert B
http://www.sigmaxi.org/about/overview/nobel.shtml
Overview Leadership Organization News ... Contact Us About: Overview
Overview
Physics
1907 Albert Michelson
1921 Albert Einstein
1923 Robert A. Millikan
1925 James Franck
1927 Arthur H. Compton
1936 Carl D. Anderson
1937 Clinton J. Davisson 1938 Enrico Fermi 1939 Ernest O. Lawrence 1943 Otto Stern 1944 Isidor Isaac Rabi 1945 Wolfgang Pauli 1946 Percy Williams Bridgman 1952 Felix Bloch 1952 Edward M. Purcell 1955 Polykarp Kusch 1955 Willis E. Lamb, Jr. 1956 John Bardeen 1956 Walter H. Brattain 1956 William Shockley 1957 Chen Ning Yang 1958 Igor Y. Tamm 1959 Owen Chamberlain 1959 Emilio G. Segre 1960 Donald A. Glaser 1961 Robert Hofstadter 1963 Eugene P. Wigner

75. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
nobel Prizes in Chemistry. This Year's nobel Prize in Chemistry Chemistry 1961.calvin, melvin, USA, University of California, Berkeley, CA, * 1911
http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/chem/acs-inorganic/Nobel.html
Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
This Year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Chemistry 1901
VAN'T HOFF, JACOBUS HENRICUS, the Netherlands, Berlin University, Germany, * 1852, + 1911: "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions".
Chemistry 1902
FISCHER, HERMANN EMIL, Germany, Berlin University, * 1852, + 1919 "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his work on sugar and purine syntheses".
Chemistry 1903
ARRHENIUS, SVANTE AUGUST, Sweden, Stockholm University, * 1859, + 1927 "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation".
Chemistry 1904
RAMSAY, Sir WILLIAM, Great Britain, London University, * 1852, + 1916: "in recognition of his services in the discovery of the inert gaseous elements in air, and his determination of their place in the periodic system".
Chemistry 1905
VON BAEYER, JOHANN FRIEDRICH WILHELM ADOLF, Germany, Munich University, * 1835, + 1917:

76. Click Here
calvin, melvin (19111997), American chemist and nobel laureate, noted for his studyof photosynthesis and for his work with certain plant species that produce
http://www.freegk.com/nobel/Calvin.php

77. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
nobel Prizes in Chemistry. This Year's nobel Prize in Chemistry. Chemistry 1961.calvin, melvin, USA, University of California, Berkeley, CA, * 1911
http://chemserv.bc.edu/sites/Nobel.html
Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
This Year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Chemistry 1901
VAN'T HOFF, JACOBUS HENRICUS, the Netherlands, Berlin University, Germany, * 1852, + 1911: "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions".
Chemistry 1902
FISCHER, HERMANN EMIL, Germany, Berlin University, * 1852, + 1919 "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his work on sugar and purine syntheses".
Chemistry 1903
ARRHENIUS, SVANTE AUGUST, Sweden, Stockholm University, * 1859, + 1927 "in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation".
Chemistry 1904
RAMSAY, Sir WILLIAM, Great Britain, London University, * 1852, + 1916: "in recognition of his services in the discovery of the inert gaseous elements in air, and his determination of their place in the periodic system".
Chemistry 1905
VON BAEYER, JOHANN FRIEDRICH WILHELM ADOLF, Germany, Munich University, * 1835, + 1917: "in recognition of his services in the advancement of organic chemistry and the chemical industry, through his work on organic dyes and hydroaromatic compounds".

78. My Service With Ten Presidents, From FDR To Bush - A Lecture By Dr. Glenn T. Sea
1961, in physics; Mrs. Ernest Hemingway; President Kennedy; Mrs. George Marshall(George Marshall had won the nobel Prize for peace); melvin calvin, our own
http://www-itg.lbl.gov/Seaborg.talks/presidents/17.html
John F. Kennedy A banquet honoring Nobel Prize winners at the White House, 1961 In April, 1962, Kennedy gave a dinner for Nobel Prize winners at the White House. Forty-nine Nobel Prize winners or their representatives were there. There's Pearl Buck; Rudolf Mossbauer, who won the Nobel Prize the previous year, 1961, in physics; Mrs. Ernest Hemingway; President Kennedy; Mrs. George Marshall (George Marshall had won the Nobel Prize for peace); Melvin Calvin, our own Melvin Calvin here at Berkeley, who had won the chemistry prize the year before; and Jacqueline Kennedy. Here am I in the last row. Owen Chamberlain, also a Nobel Prize winner from Berkeley. He's about as tall as I am, so he wound up in the back row. JFK and Dr. Seaborg at a Nevada nuclear test site In December, 1962, Kennedy visited the nuclear weapons test site in Nevada. Here I am riding with him. This is one of my favorite pictures with President Kennedy. Dr. Seaborg's reappointment letter from JFK
On June 27, 1963, he reappointed me as Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission to serve another five years. I had accepted an appointment to fill a five-year term in January, 1961, two and a half years to expire in June, 1963. Then one day in June of '63 I got a telegram from the President at home saying he was glad I had decided to accept another term as Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. I had done no such thing but my wife Helen and I talked it over and decided, well, what can you do. If the President of the United States thinks you've accepted another term, I guess you have accepted another term. So I stayed on for another five years.

79. IT - Nobel Laureates
melvin calvin (Chemistry Ph.D. '35) nobel Prize in chemistry, 1961 calvin receivedthe nobel Prize for his discovery of the chemical pathways of photosynthesis
http://www.itdean.umn.edu/about/awards/nobel.html
Nobel Laureates
Faculty Laureates
John Bardeen
Faculty member 1938-45
Nobel Prize in physics, 1956 and 1972
Bardeen shared the 1956 prize with William B. Shockley and Walter H. Brattain (Physics Ph.D. '29) for their joint invention of the transistor. Together with Leon N. Cooper and John R. Schrieffer, he won the 1972 prize for the development of the theory of superconductivity. Arthur H. Compton
Faculty member 1916-17
Nobel Prize in physics, 1927
Compton won the Nobel Prize (along with C.T.R. Wilson of England) for his discovery and explanation of the so-called "Compton effect," the change in the wavelength of X-rays when they collide with electrons in metals. William N. Lipscomb

80. Biology - Biochemistry
nobellaureates.html. melvin calvin - from nobel e-Museum http//www.nobel.se/chemistry/laureates/1961/calvin-bio.html.melvin calvin
http://science.uniserve.edu.au/school/curric/stage6/biol/biolchem.html
UniServe Science Biology Table of Contents
9.9 Biochemistry Photosynthesis - an important biochemical reaction Photosynthesis - in providing a source of energy The development of the theory of photsynthesis The people who contributed to the theory of photosynthesis ... Electron microscope and visualising plant organelles
Thank you to Jane West (OTEN) and Doug Reckord (Science Consultant, Bathurst/Orange Districts) for their contribution in locating many of these resources.
Photosynthesis - an important biochemical reaction THE PHOTOSYNTHETIC PROCESS - from the Photosynthesis Research Unit, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, includes history of photosynthesis
http://www.life.uiuc.edu/govindjee/paper/gov.html
Photosynthesis and the Web: 2001 - from the Photosynthesis Research Unit, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
http://www.life.uiuc.edu/govindjee/photoweb/
Chapter 4 - Metabolism in Plants - from Campbell University
http://www.campbell.edu/academics/colleges/biological/Metz/Biology202/web%20lectures/bio202-ch04.htm
Lecture#14 Photosynthesis - includes history, from California State University, Long Beach

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