Nobel Prize In Chemistry 2001 Academy of Sciences has decided to award the nobel Prize in hydrogenation reactions. The other half was given to K. barry sharpless (Scripps Research http://jws-edck.interscience.wiley.com:8090/WIS/WISNew.nsf/WhatsNew/EE4FBA6D54D3
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Molecular Control Earns Nobel 01 Science/Nature Frozen matter wins nobel 08 Oct 01 Health British scientistsscoop nobel Internet links nobel Institute K barry sharpless Ryoji Noyori http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1590000/1590873.stm
Extractions: The 2001 Nobel Prize for chemistry honours work that allows scientists to make only one version of a molecule that has mirrored forms. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences picked out Americans William S Knowles and K Barry Sharpless and Ryoji Noyori of Japan for their pioneering efforts in this field. The atoms in certain molecules can often take up two different configurations that are mirror images of each other - just as four fingers and a thumb can be arranged into a left hand or a right hand. Cells generally respond to only one of the shapes, while the other form can, in extreme cases, be harmful. The thalidomide disaster in the 1960s resulted from the use of a molecule with the wrong handedness. Drug products Knowles, Sharpless and Noyori were responsible for developments that now mean pharmaceutical companies can choose the specific shape they want of a particular molecule and synthesise only that version. The academy said the results of the laureates' basic research were being used in a number of drug products like antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs and heart medicines.
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Molecular Control Earns Nobel Internet links nobel Institute K barry sharpless Ryoji Noyori TheBBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/low/sci/tech/1590873.stm
Extractions: BBC NEWS News Front Page World UK England ... Talking Point Wednesday, 10 October, 2001, 09:51 GMT 10:51 UK The 2001 Nobel Prize for chemistry honours work that allows scientists to make only one version of a molecule that has mirrored forms. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences picked out Americans William S Knowles and K Barry Sharpless and Ryoji Noyori of Japan for their pioneering efforts in this field. The atoms in certain molecules can often take up two different configurations that are mirror images of each other - just as four fingers and a thumb can be arranged into a left hand or a right hand. Cells generally respond to only one of the shapes, while the other form can, in extreme cases, be harmful. The thalidomide disaster in the 1960s resulted from the use of a molecule with the wrong handedness. Drug products Knowles, Sharpless and Noyori were responsible for developments that now mean pharmaceutical companies can choose the specific shape they want of a particular molecule and synthesise only that version. The academy said the results of the laureates' basic research were being used in a number of drug products like antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs and heart medicines.
Pomona College : News@Pomona Dr. K. barry sharpless, who won the 2001 nobel Prize in Chemistry, will givefour lectures on his current research, as part of the 41st Fred J. Robbins http://www.pomona.edu/Events/News/NewsItems/012303robbins.shtml
Extractions: Sharpless is currently the W. M. Keck Professor of Chemistry at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) in La Jolla. Along with his co-workers, he discovered and developed many widely used catalytic oxidation processes. According to Dan O'Leary, associate professor of chemistry at Pomona College, "These processes have been used to produce new pharmaceuticals that couldn't have been imagined 20 years ago. And, academic chemists have widely incorporated his methodology in their own teaching and research."
TheReuben Benjamin Sandin 2002 Lecture Series 2001 Lecturer K. barry sharpless nobel Prize Winner in Chemistry and The WM KeckProfessor of Chemistry Department of Chemistry The Scripps Research Institute http://www.chem.ualberta.ca/About/events/Sandin.htm
Extractions: Location: Room E1-60 Chemistry Centre The 2001-02 Reuben Benjamin Sandin Distinguished Lectures will be presented by Professor K. Barry Sharpless, 2001 Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry, and the W.M. Keck Professor of Chemistry in the Department of Chemistry at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI). Professor K. Barry Sharpless was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He received his B.A. from Dartmouth College in 1963 and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1968. In 1970, following postdoctoral studies at Stanford and Harvard Universities, he joined the faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After three years at Stanford in the late 1970s, he returned to MIT as Arthur C. Cope Professor of Chemistry. He joined The Scripps Research Institute's faculty in 1991. Professor Sharpless' research interests focus on new reactivity and general methods for selectively controlling chemical reactions. Though the focus has progressed from regio- to stereo- to asymmetric and, now, to connectivity control, the core chemistry remains unchanged: the oxidation of olefins, that single most versatile, powerful and reliable chemical transformation. The Sharpless Lab was possibly the first academic chemistry group with robotics, and the lesson from the combinatorial numbers game was the primacy of reliability. "Click" chemistry was Professor Sharpless' response: a set of powerful, virtually 100% reliable, selective reactions for the rapid synthesis of new compounds
Les Informations Translate this page lauréats nobel. Nous avons justement salué voici quelques mois l'attribution duprestigieux Prix Wolf à Henri B. Kagan, Ryoji Noyori et K. barry sharpless, http://www.sfc.fr:8000/Informations.htm
Extractions: Ce 10 octobre 2001, l'Académie Royale des Sciences de Suède a décidé d'attribuer le Prix Nobel de Chimie de l'année 2001 pour le développement de la synthèse asymétrique catalytique, pour moitié collectivement à William S. Knowles (Saint-Louis, Missouri, USA), et à Ryoji Noyori (Université de Nagoya, Chikusa, Nagoya, Japon), pour "leurs travaux sur les réactions d'hydrogénation catalysées par chiralité"
C&EN: NEWS OF THE WEEK - ASYMMETRIC CATALYSIS WINS The 2001 nobel Prize in Chemistry will be shared by three scientists who devised Theother half goes to chemistry professor K. barry sharpless of Scripps http://pubs.acs.org/cen/topstory/7942/7942notw1.html
Extractions: Chemistry Nobel honors Knowles, Noyori, Sharpless for chiral syntheses STU BORMAN The 2001 Nobel Prize in Chemistry will be shared by three scientists who devised techniques for catalytic asymmetric synthesisthe use of chiral catalysts to accelerate the production of single-enantiomer compounds for pharmaceutical use and a wide range of other applications. Noyori Sharpless One-half of the approximately $950,000 prize will be split by Monsanto retiree William S. Knowles and chemistry professor Ryoji Noyori of Nagoya University, in Japan, for their work on catalytic asymmetric hydrogenation reactions. The other half goes to chemistry professor
Premio Nobel 2001 Per La Chimica Translate this page reale delle Scienze da deciso di assegnare il Premio nobel 2001 per la di idrogenazioneattivate da catalisi chirale ed a K. barry sharpless the Scripps http://www.itemb.se/archive/Nobel/Nobel_Chimica_2001.html
Los Catalizadores Para Reacciones Quirales Logran El Nobel De Química Translate this page La Real Academia de Ciencias de Suecia concedió ayer el premio nobel de Química2001 a los americanos William S. Knowles y K. barry sharpless, junto con el http://diariomedicovd.recoletos.es/edicion/componentes/noticia/VersionImprimirDM
2001 Kémiai Nobel-díjasai Nagojai Egyetem, Japán) megosztva, részben K. barry sharplessnek (Scripps a királisankatalizált hidrogénezési reakciók, KB sharpless a királisan http://www.kfki.hu/~cheminfo/hun/olvaso/nobel01/nobel01.html
ORF ON Science - Chemie-Nobelpreis An Amerikaner Und Japaner Translate this page K. barry sharpless, K. barry sharpless Der US-Chemiker wurde 1941 in Philadelphiaim US-Staat Pennsylvania geboren. Homepage barry sharpless, Die nobel-Stiftung. http://science.orf.at/science/news/27402
Extractions: suchen in... Science weltweit Nickname weitere... Autoren Peter Biegelbauer Andre Gingrich Herbert Hrachovec Werner Lenz Konrad Paul Liessmann Hans Michael Maitzen Siegfried Mattl Frank Rattay Birgit Sauer Franz Seifert Philipp Steger Helge Torgersen Otto Urban Reinhold Wagnleitner Manfried Welan Franz Witzeling Anton Zeilinger Sachgebiete Gesellschaft Kosmos Leben Medizin und Gesundheit Technologie Umwelt und Klima Wissen und Bildung Neues aus der Welt der Wissenschaft ORF ON Science News Leben Chemie-Nobelpreis an Amerikaner und Japaner
Canoa - Sociedad - Mejores Medicamentos Gracias Al Nobel De Química 2001 Translate this page de pesetas) con que están dotados este año cada uno de los seis nobel. La otramitad del premio va para el también estadounidense K. barry sharpless, de 60 http://www.diariodirecto.com/soc/especial/nobel/socnobel10oct.html
Extractions: HISTORIA DE ALFRED NOBEL EL PREMIO DE LA PAZ Mejores medicamentos gracias al Nobel de Química 2001 Los tres científicos galardonados hoy con el premio Nobel de Química permiten producir medicamentos más útiles, entre los que ya se cuentan los fármacos empleados contra la enfermedad de Parkinson. Además, sus descubrimientos pueden evitar errores trágicos como el de la talidomida.
Extractions: UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER October 11, 2001 A running joke around The Scripps Research Institute is that when someone is late for a meeting, they're probably talking to K. Barry Sharpless and are too engrossed to heed the time. Sharpless was greeted with cheers and hearty applause when he arrived at the Torrey Pines Mesa campus yesterday. It was the first Nobel in the institute's 40-year history, but researchers and students across the institute said the Nobel was no surprise. Skaggs made his fortune in a pharmacy and supermarket empire that includes Sav-On drug stores and the now-defunct Lucky food chain. Despite worldwide recognition for its science, insiders say the institute sometimes suffers a muddled local profile amid name confusion with UCSD's Scripps Institution of Oceanography or the nearby Scripps Clinic, both separate entities. Filling more than a million square feet of space and 14 buildings, Scripps Research is home to more than 270 professors, 800 post-doctoral fellows, 1,500 laboratory technicians and other support personnel, and 126 Ph.D. students. Researchers at the Skaggs Institute alone have published more than 1,000 papers in the last five years.
Extractions: UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER October 11, 2001 San Diego may still trail cities such as Boston or New York in the sheer number of Nobel laureates it can call its own, but the gap is closing. The city added its seventh residential laureate yesterday: K. Barry Sharpless, named co-winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in chemistry, with William Knowles and Ryoji Noyori. For Sharpless, a 60-year-old chemist at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, the Nobel is just the latest honor in an already distinguished career. Cited for discovering new methods of creating certain kinds of molecules, Sharpless joins a renowned list of past chemistry laureates, among them: Marie Curie, Harold Urey (a founding faculty member of UCSD who discovered heavy hydrogen) and Linus Pauling. Quite soon, though, Sharpless hopes to return to the lab and his current research: finding new methods for producing effective drugs quicker. Most laureates, in fact, do return to their jobs, but it isn't always easy. Many say that winning a Nobel permanently changes life's equation.
Nobel Connection more details Prof. Albert WM Lee, Chemistry Department, with K. barry sharpless(nobel Prize, asymmetric catalysis, 2001) at MIT. more details http://www.hkbu.edu.hk/~chem/nobel.htm
Extractions: The 2001 Chemistry Nobel Prize winner, Professor K. Barry Sharpless, was the post-doctoral research supervisor of our chemistry colleague Professor Albert Lee. All together, five scientists at HKBU had worked under the direct supervision, either as Ph.D. students or post-doctoral researchers, of a Chemistry Nobel Laureate. Four of them are from the Chemistry Department.
Nobel Prizes 2001 reactions William S. Knowles USA Ryoji Noyori Japan for his work on chirally catalysedoxidation reactions K. barry sharpless USA The nobel Prize in Physics http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/nobel2001.html
Nobel Prize For Chemistry 2001 K. barry sharpless, on the other hand, is awarded half of the The nobel Prize AHistory of Genius, Controversy and Prestige by Burton Feldman Read more. http://www.popular-science.net/nobel/chem-2001.html
Extractions: Many molecules appear in two forms that mirror each other just as our hands mirror each other. Such molecules are called chiral. In nature one of these forms is often dominant, so in our cells one of these mirror images of a molecule fits "like a glove", in contrast to the other one which may even be harmful. Pharmaceutical products often consist of chiral molecules, and the difference between the two forms can be a matter of life and death as was the case, for example, in the thalidomide disaster in the 1960s. That is why it is vital to be able to produce the two chiral forms separately.
Scientific American: The Nobel Prizes For 2001 In October the Royal Swedish Academy marked the centennial of the nobel Prizes. WilliamS. Knowles, Ryoji Noyori and K. barry sharpless developed catalysts http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000C0A5A-6DE0-1C6D-84A9809EC588EF21