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         Shirakawa Hideki:     more detail
  1. Chimiste Japonais: Ryoji Noyori, Utagawa Yoan, Koichi Tanaka, Kaoru Ishikawa, Ken'ichi Fukui, Hideki Shirakawa, Akira Ogata (French Edition)
  2. Dodensei kobunshi kara nani ga mieru ka (Sutearingu shirizu kagaku gijutsu o sendosuru 30-nin) (Japanese Edition) by Hideki Shirakawa, 1990

61. Hideki Shirakawa - Nobel Prize In Chemistry
hideki shirakawa. For the discovery and development of conductive polymers hideki shirakawa. External links. The Nobel Prize hideki shirakawa
http://www.nobel-prize.org/EN/Chemistry/shirakawa.html
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The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2000
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Hideki Shirakawa
"For the discovery and development of conductive polymers"
( jointly with Alan J. Heeger and Alan G. MacDiarmid External links The Nobel Prize - Hideki Shirakawa
The Nobel Foundation

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62. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
You searched for hideki* +shirakawa (subject(s) All ). hideki shirakawa Aco-winner of the Nobel Prize for chemistry, shirakawa s main contribution to
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/psisearch.pl?term1=Hideki Shirakawa&limit

63. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
Professor hideki shirakawa is awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry, 2000. Prof . hideki shirakawa Winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue.pl?term1=Hideki Shira

64. The New Zealand Edge : Heroes : Www.nzedge.com : Alan MacDiarmid
Alan G. MacDiarmid, hideki shirakawa and Alan J. Heeger. This award to AlanHeeger and to hideki shirakawa and me is recognition of the work that we
http://www.nzedge.com/heroes/macdiarmid.html
Heroes Alan MacDiarmid Family Catalyst Boy Chemist Science and Serendipity Research, Dedication, Application ... Nancy Wake
Alan MacDiarmid
PLASTIC FANTASTIC
For a hundred years young graduates have been told that “there's a great future in plastics.” That exhortation continues to have currency today, thanks to the work of New Zealand born and educated scientist Alan MacDiarmid who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2000 for his and his colleagues' "discovery and development of electronically conductive polymers." The Nobel Prize recognized advances that are seen to be the future of the technology that fuels the progress of the age of information. Alan, the model of a scientist, lives by the sign in his study: “I am a very lucky person and the harder I work the luckier I seem to be.” In January of 1892 young Archie MacDiarmid had a country holiday at the farm of friends, the Rutherfords at Pungarehu on the Taranaki coast near Cape Egmont. In a letter home Archie mentioned that one of the Rutherford boys, "Earnest" had made 28 gallons of wine. Ernest Rutherford's nomination for the 1907 Nobel Prize in Chemistry failed. Instead it was awarded to Edward Buchner of the University of Berlin for his studies of the fermentation process. But Rutherford received the 1908 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, for his fundamental discovery that the natural transmutation of heavy atoms was the explanation of radioactivity.

65. Hideki Shirakawa - Autobiography
hideki shirakawa – Autobiography. For the ten years from the third grade ofelementary school to the end of high school, I lived in the small city of
http://www.geocities.com/n21dh/shirakawa-autobio.html
For the ten years from the third grade of elementary school to the end of high school, I lived in the small city of Takayama, a town of less than sixty thousand, located in the middle of Honshu, Japan. Even though it was far away from Japan's principal cities, Takayama has been called a "little Kyoto" because of the similarity of its landform to Kyoto, the city sits in a basin surrounded by mountains with a river flowing through it, and because of its long-established cultural heritage and tradition. In this small town, rich in natural beauty, I spent my days enthusiastically collecting insects and plants, and making radios. My affinity for science was awakened and grew during in these ten years. Long after I became a polymer scientist, I occasionally remembered a short composition I had written during my last year in junior high school. At that time students compiled a commemorative collection of compositions describing our future dreams. As I recalled, I wrote something about my wish to be a scientist in the future and to conduct research on plastics useful for ordinary people. I cannot be sure what I wrote exactly because I lost the book of essays during repeated moves afterwards. I had long regretted this loss because I wanted to know more about why and how a junior high school boy decided on a future research career in plastics. Much to my surprise, I found that the full composition I had lost was printed in every Japanese newspaper the day after the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced its award of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2000 to two friends and myself. After 45 years, I could finally read the complete composition again. I was deeply impressed with the great power of the Nobel Prize.

66. Chembytes E-zine 2000 - Electrifying Discoveries
In the audience was hideki shirakawa, who topped MacDiarmid s example with hisown a silvercoloured polyacetylene. This also looked metallic,
http://www.chemsoc.org/chembytes/ezine/2000/stevenson_nov00.htm
Electrifying discoveries
This year's science Nobel prizes have been awarded for practical discoveries that led to new drugs and semiconductor electronics in the late 20th century - and polymers that look set to revolutionise electronics again in the 21st century. Richard Stevenson reports
In 1975, the story goes, Alan MacDiarmid gave a lecture in Japan. Proudly, he showed the audience a piece of gold-coloured polymer that he had made. People had got used to plastics being non-metallic insulators, but this one was different: an (SN) x compound, it looked like a metal, and at low temperatures it acted like a semiconductor. In the audience was Hideki Shirakawa, who topped MacDiarmid's example with his own: a silver-coloured polyacetylene. This also looked metallic, but it was a real, carbon-based organic polymer, and it was (by the standards of other plastics) moderately conducting. Polyacetylene had previously been prepared (by Natta, amongst others) as a rather useless black powder, but Shirakawa had discovered how to make well-defined film by reacting acetylene on the surface of a Ziegler-Natta catalyst system. As a conjugated polymer, the film had plenty of delocalised electrons; could they make it conduct electricity like a real metal?

67. Engology, Engineer Hideki Shirakawa, Nobel Peace Prize Winner, Research Engineer
hideki shirakawa Research Engineer - Nobel Prize Winner. Topic - for thediscovery and development of conductive polymers
http://www.engology.com/eng5shirakawa.htm
Hideki Shirakawa - Research Engineer - Nobel Prize Winner Topic - " for the discovery and development of conductive polymers "
For the ten years from the third grade of elementary school to the end of high school, I lived in the small city of Takayama, a town of less than sixty thousand, located in the middle of Honshu, Japan. Even though it was far away from Japan's principal cities, Takayama has been called a "little Kyoto" because of the similarity of its landform to Kyoto, the city sits in a basin surrounded by mountains with a river flowing through it, and because of its long-established cultural heritage and tradition. In this small town, rich in natural beauty, I spent my days enthusiastically collecting insects and plants, and making radios. My affinity for science was awakened and grew during in these ten years. Long after I became a polymer scientist, I occasionally remembered a short composition I had written during my last year in junior high school. At that time students compiled a commemorative collection of compositions describing our future dreams. As I recalled, I wrote something about my wish to be a scientist in the future and to conduct research on plastics useful for ordinary people. I cannot be sure what I wrote exactly because I lost the book of essays during repeated moves afterwards. I had long regretted this loss because I wanted to know more about why and how a junior high school boy decided on a future research career in plastics.

68. No
Noriyuki shirakawa, hideki HORIE, Yuichi YAMAMOTO, Shigeaki TSUNOYAMA, 392 hideki HORIE, Noriyuki shirakawa, Yoshiharu TOBITA, Koji MORITA, Satoru KONDO
http://wwwsoc.nii.ac.jp/aesj/publication/2001cont.htm
Journal of NUCLEAR SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY
Volume 38, Nos. 1-12, 2001
CONTENTS vol.38, no.1 (JANUARY, 2001) ORIGINAL PAPER Parameterization of Proton-induced Neutron Production Double Differential Cross Section up to 3 GeV in Terms of Moving Source Model
Hirohiko KITSUKI, Kenji ISHIBASHI, Nobuhiro SHIGYO, Satoshi KUNIEDA, 1 Response Function Measurements of the Self-TOF Neutron Detector for Neutrons up to 800 MeV
Michiya SASAKI, Noriaki NAKAO, Tomoya NUNOMIYA, Takashi NAKAMURA, Tokushi SHIBATA, Akifumi FUKUMURA, 8 Development of an Optical Resonator with High-Efficient Output Coupler for the JAERI Far-Infrared Free-Electron Laser
Ryoji NAGAI, Ryoichi HAJIMA, Nobuyuki NISHIMORI, Masaru SAWAMURA, Nobuhiro KIKUZAWA, Toshiyuki SHIZUMA, Eisuke MINEHARA, 15 A Numerical Study on Faraday-Type Electromagnetic Flowmeter in Liquid Metal System, (II) Analysis of End Effect due to Saddle-Shaped Small-Sized Magnets with FALCON Code
Takeshi SHIMIZU, Noriyuki TAKESHIMA, 19 Prediction of Release Rate of Burnt Sodium as Aerosol
Norihiro DODA, Hisashi NINOKATA, Hiroaki OHIRA, 30 Pyrometallurgical Partitioning of Uranium and Transuranic Elements from Rare Earth Elements by Electrorefining and Reductive Extraction
Koichi UOZUMI, Kensuke KINOSHITA, Tadashi INOUE, S.P. FUSSELMAN, D.L. GRIMMETT, J.J. ROY, T.S. STORVICK, C.L. KRUEGER, C.R. NABELEK, 36

69. Nobel Prize In Chemistry Given To Dr. Shirakawa, Professor Emeritus Of Universit
Nobel Prize Winner, Emeritus Professor hideki shirakawa of the Tsukuba UniversityNobel Prize Winner, Emeritus Professor hideki shirakawa of the Tsukuba
http://www.mext.go.jp/english/news/2000/10/001050.htm
b Education b Science and Technology b Culture and Sports b Budget b Statistics b White Paper b Home
Press Releases Nobel Prize in Chemistry Given to Dr. Shirakawa, Professor Emeritus of University of Tsukuba Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced, on October 10 2000, that this year's Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry is Dr. Hideki Shirakawa (age 64) of Prof. Emer. of University of Tsukuba.
Joint receipients were Prof. Alan Heeger at University of California, Santa Barbara, U.S.A., and Prof. Alan MacDiarmid at University of Pennsylvania, U.S.A. They are rewarded "for the discovery and development of electrically conductive polymers".
Dr. Shirakawa et al. first succeeded in the world to give electroconductivity to a plastic which usually does not transmit electricity, by chemically processing the film of the plastic called polyacetylene in 1970s.
Mr. Oshima, Minister of Education and Minister of STA, expressed on October 10 his opinion applauding the remarkable achievements of Dr. Shirakawa. Dr. Shirakawa was the 9th Japanese Nobel Prize laureate following Mr. Kenzaburo Oe who won in literature in 1994, and the 2nd in chemistry following Mr. Ken-ichi Fukui (deceased) in 1981.

70. What's Up Around The Prime Ministeri14j
Dr. hideki shirakawa, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 2000, visits the Prime Minister (18October 2000). Click on the images to see a larger version. 01s.jpg
http://www.kantei.go.jp/foreign/moritoku_e/moritoku_e_15/
Dr. Hideki Shirakawa,
Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 2000,
visits the Prime Minister
(18 October 2000)
Click on the images to see
a larger version.

"We aim to realize a nation founded on the creativity of science and technology. I hope that many young scientists will follow your suit. The news of your being awarded the Nobel Prize has made us happy and proud. Professor Shirakawa, I sincerely offer my heartfelt congratulations."
On 18 October 2000, Prime Minister Mori received at the Kantei (Official Residence of the Prime Minister) Dr. Hideki Shirakawa, Professor Emeritus of the University of Tsukuba, to whom the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences had decided to award the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2000, and talked with the Laureate for half an hour.
Referring to a news report which stated that Professor Shirakawa, as a schoolboy, had not been good at some subjects, Prime Minister Mori said: "I have to thank Professor Shirakawa for vindicating my view that a student does not necessarily have to be good at all subjects. If that student excels in one area, his or her education is a success." Professor Shirakawa remarked on the decision of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences that the potential of his work for the advancement of the IT revolution must have weighed in his favor. The Nobel Prize in Chemistry for 2000 is awarded jointly to Professor Shirakawa and two American scientists, Professor Alan J. Heeger of the University of California at Santa Barbara and Professor Alan G. MacDiarmid of the University of Pennsylvania, "for the discovery and development of conductive polymers."

71. Hideki Shirakawa
Translate this page Hideko shirakawa, de 64 anos, nascido em 1936 em Tóquio, é professor de químicano Instituto de Ciências dos Materiais da Universidade de Tsukuba (Japão).
http://www.terra.com.br/mundo/2000/10/11/082.htm
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... Imposto de Renda BUSCA Busca em notícias Busca na Internet Hideki Shirakawa Shirakawa é o segundo japonês a receber o Nobel de química (Reuters) Quarta, 11 de outubro de 2000, 14h33min Hideko Shirakawa, de 64 anos, nascido em 1936 em Tóquio, é professor de química no Instituto de Ciências dos Materiais da Universidade de Tsukuba (Japão). Esta é a 91ª vez que o Nobel de Química é atribuido. Trata-se da segunda vez que um japonês recebe este prêmio. O primeiro foi recebido em 1981 por Kenichi Fukui, que o compartilhou com o americano Roald Hoffmann. Volte para o especial Prêmio Nobel Redação Terra/AFP Volta Terra Networks, S.A.

72. Miraikan Press Releases
Scientist in Chemistry Dr. hideki shirakawa and the Science Workshop - Dr. hideki shirakawa s Profile Message from Dr. hideki shirakawa
http://www.miraikan.jst.go.jp/e/press/040608.html

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Message from the Nobel Prize Winning Scientist in Chemistry - Dr. Hideki Shirakawa and the Science Workshop -
This event will be held at the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation starting July, for the year of 2004! Accepting applications has begun! TO PRESS
June 8, 2004
The National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation (Director Mamoru Mohri, 2-41 Aomi Koto-ku Tokyo) will hold the "Message from the Nobel Prize Winning Scientist in Chemistry - Dr. Hideki Shirakawa and the Science Workshop.-" It will be held a total of 8 times over the 9 months from July of this year to March of next year. This will be the 2nd year this experimental program based on general participation, which was jointly developed by the staff members of Miraikan and Dr. Hideki Shirakawa, (Professor Emeritus University of Tsukuba) (the first took place starting from October of last year for approx. half an year) will be held.
We have decided to hold this project again this year, where Dr. Shirakawa himself becomes the lecturer and conveys the enjoyment of chemistry through experiments, in response to requests for the resumption and continuation of the experimental program. This request was made by those who were not able to participate through selection by lottery. This project created a sensation where there were 20 times the number of applicants exceeding the capacity of 20 for each program. The project received excellent reviews such as "I became interested in experiments" or "I'm much more interested in chemistry," etc., from those who participated last year.

73. Blind Spectral Decomposition Of Single-Cell Fluorescence By Parallel Factor Anal
Correspondence Address reprint requests to hideki shirakawa, PhD, Dept.of Physiology, Tokyo Women s Medical University School of Medicine 81 Kawadacho,
http://www.biophysj.org/cgi/content/abstract/86/3/1739

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HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ... TABLE OF CONTENTS This Article Full Text Full Text (PDF) Alert me when this article is cited ... Alert me if a correction is posted Services Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in PubMed Alert me to new issues of the journal Download to citation manager PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by Shirakawa, H. Articles by Miyazaki, S. Biophysical Journal
The Biophysical Society
Blind Spectral Decomposition of Single-Cell Fluorescence by Parallel Factor Analysis
Hideki Shirakawa and Shunichi Miyazaki Department of Physiology, Tokyo Women's Medical University School of Medicine, Shinjuku, Tokyo, 162-8666, Japan Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Hideki Shirakawa, PhD, Dept. of Physiology, Tokyo Women's Medical University School of Medicine 8-1 Kawadacho, Shinjuku, Tokyo, 162-8666, Japan. Tel./Fax: 81-3-5269-7362; E-mail: Simultaneous measurement of multiple signaling molecules is essential to investigate their relations and interactions in living cells. Although a wide variety of fluorescent probes

74. JSPS Awards For Eminent Scientists
Research discussion with Professor Emeritus hideki shirakawa, University ofTsukuba and Professor Alan G. MacDiarmid, University of Pennsylvania, at hotel.
http://www.jsps.go.jp/english/e-awards/report/heeger.html

75. JSPS Awards For Eminent Scientists
Research discussion with Professor Emeritus hideki shirakawa, University ofTsukuba and Professor Alan J. Heeger, University of California, at the hotel.
http://www.jsps.go.jp/english/e-awards/report/alan.htm

76. Enciclopedia :: 100cia.com
Translate this page hideki shirakawa. (En este momento no hay texto en esta p�gina. Para iniciarel art�culo, click editar esta p�gina (http//es.wikipedia.
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¿Sabías que Henri Poincare (1854-1912) dijo...?
La ciencia son hechos; de la misma manera que las casas están hechas de piedras, la ciencia está hecha de hechos; pero un montón de piedras no es una casa y una colección de hechos no es necesariamente ciencia.
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77. Physics Today December 2000
Photocredit MARGUERITE MILLER/UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, shirakawa. Alan Heeger,Alan MacDiarmid, hideki shirakawa
http://www.physicstoday.com/pt/vol-53/iss-12/p19.html
Back to Table of Contents Physics Nobel Prize Honors Roots of Information Age Lights out at LEP Nobel Prize in Chemistry Salutes the Discovery of Conducting Polymers ... Simple Mechanisms Help Explain Insect Hovering Nobel Prize in Chemistry Salutes the Discovery
of Conducting Polymers
Conducting polymers have found applications ranging from antistatic coatings to all-polymer integrated circuits. Alan Heeger Alan MacDiarmid Hideki Shirakawa In 1976, a serendipitous chain of events brought together three individuals from different academic and geographical cultures to study a curious polymer: polyacetylene. The trio soon discovered that doping this polymer can change its behavior from insulating to metallic. For that work, the threeAlan Heeger, a physicist now at the University of California, Santa Barbara; Alan MacDiarmid, a chemist from the University of Pennsylvania then specializing in inorganic chemistry; and Hideki Shirakawa, a polymer chemist who has recently retired from Japan's Tsukuba Universityhave now earned the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry "for the discovery and development of conductive polymers." Heralded at the time, the discovery of conducting polymers has become even more significant in hindsight as this class of materials has proven to be not only of intrinsic scientific interest but also of great technological promise. Conducting polymers have been put to use in such niche applications as electromagnetic shielding, antistatic coatings on photographic films, and windows with changeable optical properties. And the undoped polymers, which are semiconducting and sometimes electroluminescent, have led to even more exciting possibilities, such as transistors, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and photodetectors.

78. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition: Yukawa, Hideki@ HighBeam Research
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Yukawa, hideki@ HighBeam Research. and hideki shirakawa, a Nobel prize winner in chemistry in 2000, on April .
http://www.highbeam.com/ref/doc0.asp?docid=1E1:Yukawa-H

79. ChIN S Summary Page Hideki Shirakawa, Institute Of Materials
This is the summary page for hideki shirakawa, Institute of Materials Science,University of Tsukuba, Japan on CSDLChIN.
http://chemport.ipe.ac.cn/cgi-bin/chemport/getfiler.cgi?ID=LOoXExdw9Dvik8JwbiGhv

80. ChIN??Hideki Shirakawa(2000?

http://chemport.ipe.ac.cn/cgi-bin/chemport/getfiler.cgi?ID=LOoXExdw9Dvik8JwbiGhv

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