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         De Hevesy George:     more books (15)
  1. George de Hevesy, Life and Work by H. Levi, 1985-01-01
  2. George De Hevesy
  3. Nobel Lectures Including Presentation Speeches and Laureates' Biographies. Chemistry, 1942 - 1962. by George, HAHN, Otto, VIRTANEN, Artturi Ilmari et al. NOBEL. DE HEVESY, 1964
  4. Hafnium: Chemical element, Chemical symbol, Atomic number, Transition metal, Mendeleev's predicted elements, Zirconium, Stable nuclide, Dirk Coster, George de Hevesy.
  5. Hungarian Expatriates in Sweden: Eduardo Rózsa-Flores, George de Hevesy, Nándor Wagner, Sándor Bródy, Carl Von Garaguly
  6. Träger Des Atoms for Peace Award: Dwight D. Eisenhower, John Cockcroft, Isidor Isaac Rabi, George de Hevesy, Aage Niels Bohr, Ben Mottelson (German Edition)
  7. Jewish Chemists: Walter Gilbert, Ada Yonath, George de Hevesy, Aaron Klug, Ernst Boris Chain, Samuel Ruben, Grigory Mairanovsky
  8. Chimiste Hongrois: George de Hevesy, Richard Adolf Zsigmondy, Istvan Markó, Pál Kitaibel, József Jakab Winterl (French Edition)
  9. Swedish People of Hungarian Descent: Hungarian Expatriates in Sweden, Eduardo Rózsa-Flores, George de Hevesy, Nándor Wagner, Anders Limpar
  10. Chimiste Suédois: Alfred Nobel, Svante August Arrhenius, Jöns Jacob Berzelius, George de Hevesy, Carl Wilhelm Scheele (French Edition)
  11. Nuklearmediziner: George de Hevesy, Otmar Schober, Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, Gynter Mödder, Andrew Newberg, Elmar Doppelfeld (German Edition)
  12. Advances in Radiobiology. Proceedings 5th. 1956 by George Carl De Hevesy, 1957-01-01
  13. Selected Papers by George Carl De Hevesy, 1967-06
  14. PRESENTATION OF THE SECOND ATOMS FOR PEACE AWARD TO GEORGE CHARLES DE by De Hevesy, 1959-01-01

41. Ungarn.hu
György hevesy / george de hevesy (18851966), 1943, Chemie. György Békésy / Georgvon Békésy (1899-1972), 1961, Physiologie
http://www.magyarorszag.hu/nemet/orszaginfo/hiressegek
œgyf©lvonal: tov¡bbi k¶zigazgat¡si honlapok: Magyarorsz¡g.hu K¶zt¡rsas¡gi Eln¶k Orsz¡ggyűl©s Korm¡ny Minisztereln¶k Minisztereln¶ki Hivatal Bel¼gyminiszt©rium Eg©szs©g¼gyi Miniszt©rium Foglalkoztat¡spolitikai ©s Munka¼gyi Miniszt©rium F¶ldművel©s¼gyi ©s Vid©kfejleszt©si Miniszt©rium Gazdas¡gi ©s K¶zleked©si Miniszt©rium Ifjºs¡gi, Csal¡d¼gyi, Szoci¡lis ©s Es©lyegyenlős©gi Miniszt©rium Honv©delmi Miniszt©rium Igazs¡g¼gyi Miniszt©rium Informatikai ©s H­rk¶zl©si Miniszt©rium K¶rnyezetv©delmi ©s V­z¼gyi Miniszt©rium K¼l¼gyminiszt©rium Nemzeti Kultur¡lis –r¶ks©g Miniszt©riuma Oktat¡si Miniszt©rium P©nz¼gyminiszt©rium Seg­ts©g Honlapt©rk©p Kapcsolat Donnerstag, 15. September 2005 - Enikő Melitta Magyar English ... Ungarische Nobelpreistr¤ger
document.title=document.title+' - Nobelpreistr¤ger, die Ungarn bzw. ungarischer Abstammung sind'; Nobelpreistr¤ger, die Ungarn bzw. ungarischer Abstammung sind 
NOBELPREISTRT„GER, DIE UNGARN BZW. UNGARISCHER ABSTAMMUNG SIND F¼l¶p L©n¡rd / Philipp E. A. von Lenard (1862-1947)

42. Hungary.hu
hevesy György / george de hevesy (18851966), 1943, Chemistry. Békésy György /Georg von Békésy (1899-1972, 1961, Physiology
http://www.magyarorszag.hu/angol/orszaginfo/magyarok
Administrative Hotline: more administrative websites: Hungary.hu The office of the President The Hungarian Parliament The Government of the Republic of Hungary The Hungarian Prime Minister's Office Ministry of Health, Social and Family Affairs Ministry of Agriculture Ministry of Economy and Transport Ministry of Defence Ministry of Informatics and Communications Ministry of Environment and Water Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ministry of Cultural Heritage Ministry of Education Ministry of Finance Sitemap Feedback Thursday, 15 September 2005 - Enikő Melitta Magyar Deutsch ... Webcams Lake Balaton Gallery »
Countryinfo Famous Hungarians
Famous Hungarian Personalities of the 20th Century ... Hungarian Nobel Laureates
document.title=document.title+' - FAMOUS HUNGARIANS - NOBEL-PRIZE WINNERS'; FAMOUS HUNGARIANS - NOBEL-PRIZE WINNERS 
L©n¡rd F¼l¶p / Philipp E. A. von Lenard (1862-1947) Physics B¡r¡ny R³bert / Robert B¡r¡ny (1876-1936) Physiology Zsigmondy Rich¡rd / Richard A. Zsigmondy (1865-1929) Chemistry Szent-Gy¶rgyi Albert / Albert von Szent-Gy¶rgyi (1893-1986) Physiology Hevesy Gy¶rgy / George de Hevesy (1885-1966) Chemistry B©k©sy Gy¶rgy / Georg von B©k©sy (1899-1972 Physiology Wigner Jenő / Eugene P. Wigner (1902-1995)

43. Nobel Laureates In Chemistry By Alphabetical Order
de hevesy, george, 1943. deisenhofer, Johann, 1988. Diels, Otto Paul Hermann,1950. Eigen, Manfred, 1967. Ernst, Richard R. 1991
http://www.cartage.org.lb/en/themes/Sciences/Chemistry/Aboutchemistry/AlphaNobel
Themes Science Chemistry About Chemistry Generalities
Name Year Awarded Alder, Kurt Altman, Sidney Anfinsen, Christian B. Arrhenius, Svante August Aston, Francis William Baeyer, Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf Von Barton, Sir Derek H. R. Berg, Paul Bergius, Friedrich Bosch, Carl Boyer, Paul D. Brown, Herbert C. Buchner, Eduard Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann Calvin, Melvin Cech, Thomas R. Corey, Elias James Cornforth, Sir John Warcup Cram, Donald J. Crutzen, Paul Curie, Marie Curl, Robert F., Jr. Debye, Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus De Hevesy, George Deisenhofer, Johann Diels, Otto Paul Hermann Eigen, Manfred Ernst, Richard R. Euler-chelpin, Hans Karl August Simon Von Fischer, Ernst Otto Fischer, Hans Fischer, Hermann Emil Flory, Paul J. Fukui, Kenichi Giauque, William Francis Gilbert, Walter Grignard, Victor Haber, Fritz Hahn, Otto Harden, Sir Arthur Hassel, Odd Hauptman, Herbert A. Haworth, Sir Walter Norman Heeger, Alan J. Herschbach, Dudley R. Herzberg, Gerhard Heyrovsky, Jaroslav Hinshelwood, Sir Cyril Norman Hodgkin, Dorothy Crowfoot Hoff, Jacobus Henricus Van't

44. George De Hevesy External Link George De Hevesy – Biography Metabolism Che
george de hevesy Max von Laue July 5 metabolism chemist Nazis James Franck NielsBohr Institute denmark aqua regia george de hevesy – Biography.
http://en.powerwissen.com/O9LyIt SZNUJFRAYM3lhXg==_George_de_Hevesy.html
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George de Hevesy
You´ve searched for " George de Hevesy To download this article in pdf format, just click here: George de Hevesy.pdf George de Hevesy August 1 July 5 ) was a Hungarian chemist who was important in the development of the tracer method where radioactive tracer s are used to study chemical processes, e.g., the metabolism of animals. For this he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1943. When the Nazis invaded Denmark he dissolved the gold Nobel Prize s of Max von Laue and James Franck into aqua regia and placed this reagent on a shelf in his laboratory at the Niels Bohr Institute . After the war , he returned to find the solution undisturbed and precipitated the gold out of the acid.
External link
the TOP 3 MSN - results for "George de Hevesy" Computer Dictionary - G-48 www.hyperdictionary.com/dict-e/g-48.html

45. UIC - The Peaceful Atom
george de hevesy. The first practical application of a radioisotope was History has forgotten the landlady, but george de hevesy went on to win the
http://www.uic.com.au/peac.htm
The Peaceful Atom
The first power station to produce electricity by using heat from the splitting of uranium atoms began operating in the 1950s. Today most people are aware of the important contribution nuclear energy makes in providing 16% of the world's electricity, - more than all electricity produced worldwide in 1960. Not so well known are the many other ways the peaceful atom has slipped quietly into our lives, often unannounced and in many cases unappreciated. Radioisotopes and radiation have many applications in agriculture, medicine, industry and research. They greatly improve the day to day quality of our lives. What is a radioisotope? Isotopes are different forms of an atom of the same chemical element. They have identical chemical properties but a different relative atomic mass. While the number of protons is the same, the number of neutrons in the nucleus differs. Some isotopes are referred to as 'stable' and others as 'unstable' or 'radioactive'. It is the radioactive nature of these unstable isotopes, usually referred to as ' radioisotopes ', which gives them so many applications in modern science and technology. Any isotope can be used as a tag to follow the movement of some material.

46. Hevesy
It is named after george de hevesy (18851966), who received the Nobel Prize for The 2002 george hevesy Medal Award was presented at the Seventh
http://members.aon.at/namls/Hevesy.html
Hevesy Medal Awards 1968-2004
The Hevesy Medal Award is the premier international award of excellence honouring outstanding achievements in radioanalytical and nuclear chemistry. It is named after George de Hevesy (1885-1966), who received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1943 for his work on the use of isotopes as tracers in the study of chemical processes. [Click here for more information about this Nobel Prize.] Established in 1968 by the Editor-in-Chief and the (then) publishers of the Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry (JRNC), the Hevesy Medal Award is given in recognition of excellence through outstanding, sustained career achievements in the fields of pure and applied nuclear and radiochemistry, particularly applications to nuclear analytical chemistry. It comprises an engraved bronze medal (in a presentation case) and an ornamental scroll, which are presented at a major international radiochemical conference occurring in the year of the award. The Hevesy Medal Award has no monetary value. The Hevesy Medal was awarded almost annually during the period 1968-86 to nineteen distinguished individuals whose contributions had traced and defined the scope and depth of radioanalysis through the prolific postwar years of the nuclear era. Their achievements included pioneering radioactivation analysis methodology and applications, the development of radiochemical separation procedures and analytical schemes, radiotracer applications, analytical developments such as substoichiometric isotopic dilution analysis, automated systems and computerized systems, and widespread fields of application.

47. The Elemenents Of The Periodic Table Sorted By Inventor Surname
Coster, Dirk de hevesy, george Charles, Hafnium, Hf. Courtois, Bernard, Iodine,I. Crawford, Adair, Strontium, Sr. Cronstedt, Alex Fredrik, Nickel, Ni
http://www.lenntech.com/Periodic-chart-elements/inventor-surname.htm

Chemical elements listed by inventor surname
Search :
Contact us
The elemenents of the periodic table sorted by inventor surname
click on any element's name for further chemical properties, environmental data or health effects. This list contains the 118 elements of chemistry. The chemical elements of
the periodic chart sorted by: Inventor- surname Name chemical element Symbol Name alphabetically
Agricola, Georgius Bismut Bi Atomic number Arfvedson, Johan August Lithium Li Symbol Hassium Hs Atomic Mass Meitnerium Mt Electronegativity Darmstadtium Ds Density Ununbium Uub Melting point Balard, Antoine-Jérôme Bromine Br Boiling point Berzelius, Jöns Jacob Silicon Si Vanderwaals radius Berzelius, Jöns Jacob Selenium Se Year of discovery Berzelius, Jöns Jacob Thorium Th Inventor surname Black, Joseph Magnesium Mg Elements in earthcrust Brandt, Georg Cobalt Co Elements in human body Brandt, Hennig Phosphorus P Covalenz radius Rubidium Rb Ionization energy Cavendish, Henry

48. Suggested Reading For The Topic: Iodine - Lenntech
Cleve, Per Teodor Thulium Tm Corson, Dale R. Mackenzie, KR Astatine At Coster,Dirk de hevesy, george Charles Hafnium Hf Courtois, Bernard Iodine I
http://www.lenntech.com/topics/iodine.htm

Suggested reading for the topic:
Iodine
Search :
Lenntech reading suggestions for the topic: Iodine
Iodine (I) - Chemical properties, Health and Environmental effects Iodine (I)-Chemical properties, Health and Environmental effects Iodine -I Chemical properties of iodine -Health effects of iodine -Environmental effects of iodine Atomic number 53 Atomic mass 126.9045 g.mol -1 Electronegativity according to Pauling 2.5 Density 4.93 g.cm -3 at 20 ° C Melting point 114 ° C Boiling point 184 ° C Vanderwaals radius 0.177 nm Ionic radius 0.216 nm (-1); 0.05 nm (+ 7) Isotopes 15 Electronic shell [Kr] 4d 10 5s 2 5p 5 Energy of first ionisation 1008.7 kJ.mol Astatine (At) - Chemical properties, Health and Environmental effects , leaves no reason for considering the effects of astatine on human health. Astatine is studied in a few nuclear research laboratories where its high radioactivity requires special handling techniques and precautions. Astatine is a halogen and possibly accumulates in the thyroid like iodine . From a chemical point of view, one can speculate that its toxicity would mimic that of

49. MS 0844: The George De Hevesy Papers, 1908-1965
MS 0844 The george de hevesy Papers, 19081965. Libraries Home Special CollectionsHome Library Catalog Databases Forms Help Services
http://www.lib.utk.edu/spcoll/manuscripts/ms0844fa.html
University Links About the University Academic Programs Administration Libraries Research Support UT The University System A-Z Index WebMail Dept. Directory Select type of search Library Site Search People Search Campus Search System Search MS 0844: The George de Hevesy Papers, 1908-1965 Libraries Home Special Collections Home Library Catalog Databases ... Libraries A to Z Contact Information
Hoskins Library
1401 Cumberland Avenue
Knoxville, TN 37996-4000
e-mail: special@aztec.lib.utk.edu Administrative Information Series/Container List Series I: Correspondence: 1910-1947. Box 1
Folder 1-a: Aston, F. W., 7/14/23-5/24/450
Folder 1-b: Auer, von Helsback, Juni 25, 1923-20 Oktober 1926.
Folder 1-c: Bohr, Neils, 29 Jan 1913-March 10, 1947.
Folder 1-d: Chadwick, Nov. 2-llFebruary 1929.
Folder 1-e: Darwin, G., December 19, 1912-May 16.
Folder 1-f: Fleck, A., 20 July 1913-1 December 1913. Folder 1-g: Geiger, H., l4.ll.l2-llFebr 1929. Folder 1-h: Geuler, H. Von, 1942, 1941-1943, and 1943. Folder 1-i: Haber, Fritz, 8 Oct 27.

50. HAS: Hungary's Nobel Prize Winners
george de hevesy. August 1, 1885, Budapest July 5, 1966, Freiburg im Breisgau.george de hevesy (György hevesy) received the 1943 Nobel Prize for
http://www.mta.hu/?id=864

51. Hevesy György Nobel-díjas újratemetése
At the time when george de hevesy received the Nobel prize of Chemistry for year george de hevesy was from every point of view a truly international
http://www.mta.hu/wwwoldold.mta.hu/aktualis/szemelyi/h06.htm?R=1544479887

52. Pioneers: Georg Charles Von Hevesy
Also called george Charles de hevesy chemist and recipient of the 1943 NobelPrize for Chemistry. His development of isotopic tracer techniques greatly
http://www.radiochemistry.org/nuclearmedicine/pioneers/hevesy_g.shtml
Georg Charles von Hevesy
Father of Radiochemistry and Nuclear Medicine
born Aug. 1, 1885, Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now in Hungary]
died July 5, 1966, Freiburg im Breisgau, W.Ger.
Also called George Charles de Hevesy chemist and recipient of the 1943 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. His development of isotopic tracer techniques greatly advanced understanding of the chemical nature of life processes. In 1923 he also discovered, with the Dutch physicist Dirk Coster, the element hafnium.
Educated at the Technische Hochschule in Berlin and the University of Freiburg, Hevesy in 1911 began work at the University of Manchester, England, under Ernest Rutherford on the chemical separation of radium. Though his attempts proved unproductive, they stimulated him to explore the use of radioactive isotopes as tracers. He joined Friedrich Paneth at Vienna (1912) and made significant progress in tracer studies. Invited to Copenhagen (1920), Hevesy and Coster, pursuing a suggestion of Niels Bohr, discovered hafnium among ores of zirconium.
Hevesy became a professor at Freiburg in 1926 and began to calculate the relative abundance of the chemical elements. In 1934, after preparing a radioactive isotope of phosphorus, he analyzed various physiological processes by tracing the course of "labeled" radioactive phosphorus through the body. These experiments revealed the dynamic state of the body constituents. After fleeing from the Nazis in 1943, Hevesy became a professor at the Institute of Organic Chemistry, Stockholm. His published works include the two-volume Adventures in Radioisotope Research (1962).

53. Index - Geolatry To George Dibdin-Pitt
george C. Scott george Catlett Marshall george Charles hevesy de hevesy george dewey george Dibdin Pitt george DibdinPitt
http://www.english-dictionary.us/index/page/G56.asp

Geolatry
Geologer Geologian Geologic ... George Dibdin-Pitt Add the dictionary search box to your site! Free translator

54. ASÍ FUNCIONA
de hevesy, george, Hungría, 1943. debye, Petrus (Peter) Josephus Wilhelmus,Holanda, 1936. deisenhofer, Johann (Compartido), Alemania, 1988
http://www.asifunciona.com/que_quien/nq_apellido/nobel_quimica_apellido.htm
PREMIOS NOBEL DE QUÍMICA POR APELLIDOS
APELLIDOS - NOMBRES PAÍS AÑO Agre, Peter EE.UU. Alder, Kurt (Compartido) Alemania Altman, Sidney (Compartido) Cantabria Anfinsen, Christian B. (Compartido) EE.UU. Arrhenius, Svante August Suecia Aston, Francis William Inglaterra Barton, Drek H. R. (Compartido) Inglaterra Berg, Paul (Compartido) EE.UU. Bergius, Friedrich (Compartido) Alemania Bosch, Carl (Compartido) Alemania Boyer, Paul D. (Compartido) EE.UU. Brown, Herbert C. (Compartido) EE.UU. Buchner, Eduard Alemania Butenandt, Adolf Friedrich Johann (Compartido) Alemania Calvin, Melvin EE.UU. Cech, Thomas R. (Compartido) EE.UU. Corey, Elias James EE.UU. Cornforth, John Warcup (Compartido) Cram, Donald J. (Compartido) EE.UU. Crutzen, Paul J. (Compartido) Holanda Curie, Marie Francia Curl Jr., Robert F. (Compartido) EE.UU. de Hevesy, George Debye, Petrus (Peter) Josephus Wilhelmus Holanda Deisenhofer, Johann (Compartido) Alemania Diels, Otto Paul Hermann (Compartido) Alemania du Vigneaud, Vincent EE.UU. Eigen, Manfred (Compartido) Alemania Ernst, Richard R. Suiza Fenn, John B.

55. George De Hevesy - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
(Redirected from george Charles de hevesy). george de hevesy (August 1, 1885 July 5, 1966) was a Hungarian chemist who was important in the development of
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Charles_De_Hevesy
George de Hevesy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from George Charles De Hevesy George Charles de Hevesy (also known as Georg Karl von Hevesy August 1 July 5 ) was a Hungarian chemist who was important in the development of the tracer method where radioactive tracers are used to study chemical processes, e.g., the metabolism of animals. For this he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1943. When the Nazis invaded Denmark he dissolved the gold Nobel Prizes of Max von Laue and James Franck into aqua regia and placed this reagent on a shelf in his laboratory at the Niels Bohr Institute . After the war , he returned to find the solution undisturbed and precipitated the gold out of the acid. The Nobel Society then recast his Nobel Prize using the original gold. in 1923 he was a co-discoverer of Hafnium , with Dirk Coster edit
External link
Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_de_Hevesy Categories 1885 births 1966 deaths ... Hungarian chemists Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox In other languages

56. George De Hevesy - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
george de hevesy – Biography. Retrieved from http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/george_de_hevesy . Categories 1885 births 1966 deaths Nobel Prize in
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_de_Hevesy
George de Hevesy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
George Charles de Hevesy (also known as Georg Karl von Hevesy August 1 July 5 ) was a Hungarian chemist who was important in the development of the tracer method where radioactive tracers are used to study chemical processes, e.g., the metabolism of animals. For this he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1943. When the Nazis invaded Denmark he dissolved the gold Nobel Prizes of Max von Laue and James Franck into aqua regia and placed this reagent on a shelf in his laboratory at the Niels Bohr Institute . After the war , he returned to find the solution undisturbed and precipitated the gold out of the acid. The Nobel Society then recast his Nobel Prize using the original gold. in 1923 he was a co-discoverer of Hafnium , with Dirk Coster edit
External link
Retrieved from " http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_de_Hevesy Categories 1885 births 1966 deaths ... Hungarian chemists Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox In other languages

57. Europhysics News NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1999 (p
where Roland Eötvös, founder of the Hungarian Physical Society in 1891, andalso Nobel laureate chemists george de hevesy and george A. Olah, studied.
http://www.fi.uib.no/~csernai/Sci-Policy/gymnasiu.htm
europhysics news NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1999 (p. 13O.) features What accounts for the legendary status of Hungarian schools? Hardworking teachers have always put the latest research in the hands of schoolchildren George Marx, Hungary The Hungarian Gymnasium The Economist) said: "The early 20th-century Hungarian education system was the most brilliant the world has seen until its close imitator in post-1945 Japan." The advantage of the gymnasium system is that in the best gymnasia students can be pressed toward the limits of their capacities: they are exposed to an intellectual rigor that is not usually reached in high schools in more democratic countries. In particular, the gymnasium system gives dignity to teachers who provide instruction in top secondary schools. A scholar or scientist who knows that his or her talents lie in pedagogy rather than in research does not feel he or she is falling back if he or she spends a whole life teaching in such a school. A fine teacher retiring at the age of sixty from the Minta Gymnasium in Budapest, for example, would find many of the most famous people in Hungary in his or her debt because they had passed through his or her hands. Enthusiasts say that the two most successful of these gymnasium systems in history have been the one in post-1945 Japan, and arguably that of Hungary from about 1890 almost to the 1930s. The average Japanese 18 year old is today more advanced in math than all except the top 1 % of American 18 year olds. The same would have been true of gymnasium pupils in Budapest in 1914.

58. JCE 2002 (79) 301 [Mar] A Century Of Chemical Dynamics Traced Through The Nobel
1943 george de hevesy. Josh Van Houten department of Chemistry, Saint Michael sCollege, Colchester, VT 05439. The fourth Nobel Prize for research related
http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/Journal/Issues/2002/Mar/abs301.html
Subscriptions Software Orders Support Contributors ... March Chemical Education Today Nobel Centennial Essays A Century of Chemical Dynamics Traced through the Nobel Prizes. 1943: George de Hevesy Josh Van Houten
Department of Chemistry, Saint Michael's College, Colchester, VT 05439
March 2002
Vol. 79 No. 3
p. 301
Table of Contents

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... Supplement Abstract The fourth Nobel Prize for research related directly to chemical dynamics was awarded to George de Hevesy in 1943 "for his work on the use of isotopes as tracers in the study of chemical processes". de Hevesy's interest in isotopes stemmed from his work with Ernest Rutherford in Manchester when they found that it was impossible to separate various lead isotopes resulting from the radioactive decay of radium. This led de Hevesy to the conclusion that if isotopes could not be separated by ordinary chemical means, then isotopes could be used as tracers in research on chemical and physiological processes. Isotope tracers have been extremely valuable tools in research into chemical reaction dynamics in the second half of the 20th century. Supplement A list of all recipients of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, including their affiliations and the work for which the award was made, is available in PDF format.

59. Nobel Prizes In Chemistry
george de hevesy. Hungarian. nuclear. 1944. Otto Hahn. German. nuclear hevesy, george de. Georg Meyer. 1908. Freiburg. 1885 1966
http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/NOBEL/CHEM/
Nobel Prizes in Chemistry
Department of Chemistry, York University
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ONTARIO M3J 1P3, CANADA For suggestions, corrections, additional information, and comments please send e-mails to jandraos@yorku.ca http://www.chem.yorku.ca/NAMED/ NOBEL PRIZE CHEMISTRY YEAR NAMES OF SCIENTISTS NATIONALITY TYPE OF CHEMISTRY Jacobus van't Hoff Dutch physical Emil Fischer German organic Svante Arrhenius Swedish physical Sir William Ramsay British physical Adolf von Baeyer German organic Henri Moissan French inorganic Eduard Buchner German organic/bioorganic Lord Ernest Rutherford British nuclear Wilhelm Ostwald Latvian physical Otto Wallach German organic Marie Curie Polish-French nuclear Victor Grignard French organic Paul Sabatier French organic Alfred Werner German inorganic Theodore Williams Richards American physical Richard Martin Willstatter German organic no prize awarded no prize awarded Fritz Haber German physical/industrial no prize awarded Walther Hermann Nernst German physical Frederick Soddy British nuclear Francis William Aston British analytical Fritz Pregl Slovenian analytical no prize awarded Richard Zsigmondy Austrian physical Theodor Svedberg Swedish physical Heinrich Wieland German organic Adolf Windaus German organic Hans von Euler-Chelpin German bioorganic Arthur Harden British bioorganic Hans Fischer German bioorganic Friedrich Bergius German physical Carl Bosch German physical Irving Langmuir American physical no prize awarded Harold Urey American nuclear Frederic Joliot French nuclear Irene Joliot-Curie French nuclear Peter Debye Dutch physical Sir Walter Haworth

60. Lexikon George De Hevesy
george de hevesy aus der freien Enzyklopädie Wikipedia und
http://lexikon.freenet.de/George_de_Hevesy

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Sie sind hier: Startseite Lexikon George de Hevesy
George de Hevesy
George de Hevesy (eigentlich Gy¶rgy Hevesy 1. August in Budapest 5. Juli in Freiburg im Breisgau ), war ein ungarischer Chemiker Hevesy studierte Chemie, Mathematik und Physik in Budapest, Berlin und Freiburg. AnschlieŸend arbeitete er unter anderem bei Ernest Rutherford und Friedrich Adolf Paneth . In Kopenhagen entdeckte 1922 er gemeinsam mit Dirk Coster 1922 das Element Hafnium Er ist einer der Begr¼nder der Radiochemie und Erfinder der Tracermethode , mit der chemische Elemente durch die Beimischung ihrer radioaktiven Isotope analytisch gekennzeichnt werden.

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