News.NanoApex.com - Richard Smalley Lectures At Trinity University nanoeducation SAN ANTONIO, TX richard E. smalley, winner of the 1996 NobelPrize for chemistry, will present a lecture at 730 pm on April 16 at Trinity http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=3278
News.NanoApex.com - Richard Smalley Lectures At Trinity University SAN ANTONIO, TX richard E. smalley, winner of the 1996 Nobel Prize for chemistry,will present a lecture at 730 pm on April 16 at Trinity University. http://news.nanoapex.com/modules.php?name=News&file=print&sid=3278
Scientific American Digital Browse For a moment, I consider humoring richard E. smalley. After all, he and one ofhis graduate students have been fussing with the samples for several minutes http://www.sciamdigital.com/browse.cfm?ITEMIDCHAR=43E35134-29D5-44A9-881B-465D44
Extractions: 1. D.A.Bochvar and E.G.Gal'pern, Dokl.Akad.Nauk.USSR 2. I.V.Stankevich, M.V.Nikerov, D.A.Bochvar, Russ.Chem.Rev. 3. H.W.Kroto, J.R.Heath, S.C.O'Brien, R.F.Curl, R.E.Smalley, Nature 4. Iijima, Sumio. Helical microtubules of graphitic carbon. Nature (London, United Kingdom) 354(6348), 56-58. 1991. 5. M. S. Dresselhaus, G. Dresselhaus, P. C. Eklund, Science of Fullerenes and Carbon Nanotubes (Academic Press Inc., 1996). 6. P. M. Ajayan and T. W. Ebbesen, Rep.Prog.Phys. 7. Niyogi, S., Hamon, M. A., Hu, H., Zhao, B., Bhowmik, P., Sen, R., Itkis, M. E., and Haddon, R. C. Chemistry of Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes. Accounts of Chemical Research 35(12), 1105-1113. 2002. 8. P. Avouris, Chemical Physics 9. Tans, Sander J., Devoret, Michel H., Dal, Hongjie, Thess, Andreas, Smalley, Richard E., Geerligs, L. J., and Dekker, Cees. Individual single-wall carbon nanotubes as quantum wires. Nature (London) 386(6624), 474-477. 1997. 10. P. M. Ajayan and O. Z. Zhou, Carbon Nanotubes 11. M. Damnjanovic, I. Milosevic, T. Vukovic, R. Sredanovic
Varsity Science & Technology Nobel Prize winner richard E. smalley explained his work on Buckytubes! richard E. smalley offered up a hint of the Jetsonsstyle future universe that http://varsity.utoronto.ca:16080/archives/121/nov30/scitech/build.html
Extractions: Varsity Staff This years John C. Polanyi Nobel Laureate Lecture Series was held on Tuesday, November 28 at Convocation Hall. The theme was Building With Molecules a symposium on how the fundamental world of atoms is engineered to produce new and miraculous materials to borrow a line from Fatboy Slim, allowing Better Living Through Chemistry. The line up featured four well-known chemists. Sir John Meurig Thomas, Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge, England, spoke about The Architecture of the Invisible. K. Barry Sharpless of The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, presented a lecture entitled Stitching with Nitrogen. Nobel Prize winner Richard E. Smalley explained his work on Buckytubes! New Nanotechnology from Carbon. Another Nobel Prize winner, Ahmed Zewail, delivered Building with Molecules, The Femtosecond Way. Richard E. Smalley offered up a hint of the Jetsons-style future universe that we all hope chemistry will bring us. The Nobel-winning creator of buckminsterfullerene the spherical carbon molecule that netted him the prize in 1996 showed us how he was hard at work making buckytubes. These cylinders of pure carbon, only one molecule thick, are synthesized by rolling a flat sheet of graphite into a hollow structure that can be capped at one or both ends. Smalley has predicted that fibres made from buckytubes will be the strongest and stiffest material ever made imagine a flexible cable with the durability of diamond. As they are almost perfect conductors of electricity, buckytubes promise to revolutionize everything from computer monitors to home lighting.
MRS Fall 98 Meeting 600 pm Plenary Talk richard E. smalley, Rice University Buckytubes The plenary speaker was Nobel laureate Prof richard E. smalley of Rice University. http://www.mrs.org/meetings/fall98/updates/nov30.html
Extractions: ACTIVITIES ... December 4 Today's Highlights 8:00 am Technical Talks - First Day 12:00 Noon GSA Special Talks 6:00 pm Plenary Talk: Richard E. Smalley, Rice University "Buckytubes - New Materials and New Devices from Carbon" 8:00 pm Poster Sessions - First Day This was the first full day of technical talks. One of the first talks was by G. Robert Odette in symposium M on understanding the mechanics of fracture. Odette talked about a new Master Curve method for fracture properties of materials which has now achieved ASTM consensus and which seems to transcend other variables for determining fracture resistance. This has been shown to be empirically successful but a fair amount of fundamental understanding still remains. http://nano.nist.gov http://www.cmsms.vt.edu The major event of the day was the plenary session. The plenary speaker was Nobel laureate Prof Richard E. Smalley of Rice University. Smalley's talk was titled "Buckytubes - New Materials and New Devices from Carbon". He started the talk by showing a picture of the astronauts of the recent shuttle mission that included John Glenn. He then showed the picture of the first set of astronauts slated for the Space Station in the year 2000.
More On Smalley-Drexler Debate - Nanodot Isn t it curious how Drexler gets all up when richard smalley tries to appease on my blog on the debate between K. Eric Drexler and richard E. smalley. http://nanodot.org/article.pl?sid=03/12/01/0557241
Smalley On The Future Of Nanotubes - Nanodot Molecular Nanotechnology An Anonymous Coward writes MIT s Technology Reviewprinted an interesting Q A session with richard E. smalley, the founder of the http://nanodot.org/articles/01/02/26/022218.shtml
Extractions: "SMALLEY: I like the word "nanotechnology." I like it because the prefix "nano" guarantees it will be fundamental science for decades; the "technology" says it is engineering, something you're involved in not just because you're interested in how nature works but because it will produce something that has a broad impact. When you put those two things together in one word, there's a tension. As our disciplines, particularly chemistry and physics, have matured, we're now dealing with things at a very fundamental level that do have a practical importance." ... SMALLEY:... "I believe research at what I call the wet/dry interface is intellectually most intriguing to me. It may be that in 20 years from now that is where we'll look back and say we have made huge advances. What I call the wet side of nanotechnology is the machinery of cellular life. As we learn to interface this natural machinery with inorganic, electromechanical structures and systems engineered on the nanometer scale (the dry side of nanotechnology), vast new frontiers will be opened both in fundamental science and in practical technology." ...
Ref.html Robert F. Curl and richard E. smalley, Probing C60, Science, 18 Nov. The AllStar of Buckyball; Profile richard E. smalley, Scientific American, http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/local/projects/Lertpibulpanya/ref.html
US Senate Committee On Energy And Natural Resources Witness, Dr. richard E. smalley , Director , Carbon Nanotechnology Laboratory,Rice University. Testimony, Testimony of RE smalley to the Senate Committee http://energy.senate.gov/hearings/testimony.cfm?id=1129&wit_id=3343
Conference Program Technical Program (Tentative) Is Open Nobel Laureate richard E. smalley (pictured) and Intel Science Talent Search Grand richard E. smalley, Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology, http://www.mein.nagoya-u.ac.jp/IEEE-NANO/IEEE-NANO-2001/program.html
Extractions: Revised on Oct. 18, 2001 If the paper is listed as " open " in the program, it means that if there is a no-show in the session, the chair will call on the author to present the paper in its place. Otherwise if everyone in the session shows up, then the author will have 2 minutes to briefly present the results. In addition to the excellent technical program, this conference features
Applegate Directory Ltd Scott, richard Engineering Director The Electronic Development Co Ltd smalley, David Managing Director Daniels smalley Partnership http://www.applegate.co.uk/indexes/people/all-s.htm
Extractions: Applegate Directory Ltd Last update: Wednesday, September 14, 2005 All Industry Electronics Catalog-on-line Business Services ... Stock-on-Line Promoting the best of Industry, Technology and Manufacturing in the UK and Ireland General Information Home Page About Applegate Add/Edit Information Add to Desktop ... Work for Us News Applegate News Industry News Trade Shows Indexes Company Products Who Sells Who Town/City ... Top Products Sections All Industry Business Services Construction Electronics ... Z Search Top People Index - S
List Of Publications April 2001 Sander J. Tans, Michel H. Devoret, Hongjie Dai, Andreas Thess, richard E. J.Wildoer, A. Bezryadin, LJ Geerligs, Andreas Thess, and richard E. smalley. http://www.amolf.nl/research/biophysics/publications.html
Extractions: Electronic transport in monolayers of phthalocyanine polymers Tans, S. J., R. G. Miedema, L. J. Geerligs, C. Dekker, J. Wu, D. Neher and G. Wegner Nanotechnology 14, 1043-1050 (2003). The Bacteriophage ø29 Portal Motor can Package DNA Against a Large Internal Pressure Douglas E. Smith, Sander J. Tans, Steven B. Smith, Shelley Grimes, Dwight E. Anderson, and Carlos Bustamante. Nature 413, 748-752 (2001). (featured as cover story of that issue) Local potential modulations along semiconducting carbon nanotubes. Nature 404, 834-835 (2000). Nanotube transistors. Sander J. Tans. McGraw-Hill 2000 Yearbook of Science and Technology. Observation of standing electron waves in carbon nanotubes. Liesbeth C. Venema, Jeroen W. G. Wildoër, Jorg W. Janssen, Sander J. Tans, Hinnne L. J. Temminck Tuinstra, Leo P. Kouwenhoven, and Cees Dekker. Science 283, 52-55 (1999). Electron-electron correlations in carbon nanotubes. Sander J. Tans, Michel H. Devoret, Remco J. A. Groeneveld, and Cees Dekker.
Scientific American Annual Index 1991 smalley, richard E., and Robert F. Curl. FULLERENES; October, page 32. FULLERENES, by Robert F. Curl and richard E. smalley; October, page 32. http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/toc/scam91.html
Extractions: Aftergood, Steven, David W. Hafemeister, Oleg F. Prilutsky, Joel R. Primack and Stanislav N. Rodionov. NUCLEAR POWER IN SPACE; June, page 18. Alexander, R. McNeill. HOW DINOSAURS RAN; April, page 62. Anthony, David, Dimitri Y. Telegin and Dorcas Brown. THE ORIGIN OF HORSEBACK RIDING; December, page 44. Aral, Sevgi O., and King K. Holmes. SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES IN THE AIDS ERA; February, page 18. Bak, Per, and Kan Chen. SELF-ORGANIZED CRITICALITY; January, page 26. Barnes, Joshua, Lars Hernquist and Francois Schweizer. COLLIDING GALAXIES; August, page 26. Barton, John H. PATENTING LIFE; March, page 18. Barucci, M. Antonietta, Richard P. Binzel and Marcello Fulchignoni. THE ORIGINS OF THE ASTEROIDS; October, page 66. Bassuk, Ellen L. HOMELESS FAMILIES; December, page 20. Beardsley, Tim. TRENDS IN BIOLOGY: SMART GENES; August, page 72. Bellwood, Peter. THE AUSTRONESIAN DISPERSAL AND THE ORIGIN OF LANGUAGES; July, page 70. Bergman, Christopher A, Edward McEwen and Robert L. Miller. EARLY BOW DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION; June, page 50. Berns, Michael W. LASER SURGERY; June, page 58.
THIS SEARCH THIS DOCUMENT THIS CR ISSUE GO TO Next Hit Forward ROBERT F. CURL AND richard E. smalley (Senate March 13, 1997) Professor Curl,a native Texan from Alice, and Professor smalley are codiscoverers of http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?r105:S13MR7-270:
The Smalley Group Website Has Moved This site has moved to http//www.ruf.rice.edu/~smalleyg. Please update your links. http://cnst.rice.edu/smalleygroup/
Warren County Ohio Biographies Warren County OH Message Board posted 16 Mar 2000 by Lisa E. Herdahl The StoryOf richard McNemar, An Eloquent Pioneer Preacher article by Dallas http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohwarren/Bios/bios_main.htm
Extractions: You are visitor since 28 May 2003 Biographies with Warren County Connections There are a number of resources for biographies on individuals with Warren County connections. Some that I know of include: Beers History of Warren County has numerous biographies, some of which have been transcribed. See Index for lists of names and Lookup Volunteers 1875 Combination Atlas Map of Warren County by L. H. Everts. See Lookup Volunteers 1903 Centennial Atlas of Warren County, Ohio by the Centennial Atlas Association.See Lookup Volunteers The Warren County Genealogical Society has a large collection of biographical material with online indexes for Biographies First Families and Vertical Files The Mary L Cook Library in Waynesville has a large collection of biographies in vertical files with an online index of Surname Files The Warren County Historical Society has a large collection of surname files plus a large surname card catalog. "Paths Through the Wilderness" by Don Ross - Stories from the Springboro area
NANOTECHNOLOGY Prepared Written Statement and Supplemental Material of RE smalley, In 1959Richard Feynman delivered a now famous lecture, There is Plenty of Room at http://www.house.gov/science/smalley_062299.htm
Extractions: NANOTECHNOLOGY Prepared Written Statement and Supplemental Material of R. E. Smalley, Rice University, June 22, 1999 Mr. Chairman, I appreciate the opportunity today to present my views on nanotechnology. There is a growing sense in the scientific and technical community that we are about to enter a golden new era. We are about to be able to build things that work on the smallest possible length scales, atom by atom with the ultimate level of finesse. These little nanothings, and the technology that assembles and manipulates them nanotechnology will revolutionize our industries, and our lives. Everything we see around us is made of atoms, the tiny elemental building blocks of matter. From stone, to copper, to bronze, iron, steel, and now silicon, the major technological ages of humankind have been defined by what these atoms can do in huge aggregates, trillions upon trillions of atoms at a time, molded, shaped, and refined as macroscopic objects. Even in our vaunted microelectronics of 1999, in our highest-tech silicon computer chip the smallest feature is a mountain compared to the size of a single atom. The resultant technology of our 20th century is fantastic, but it pales when compared to what will be possible when we learn to build things at the ultimate level of control, one atom at a time. Nature has played the game at this level for billions of years, building stuff with atomic precision. Every living thing is made of cells that are chock full of nanomachines - proteins, DNA, RNA, etc.- each jiggling around in the water of the cell, rubbing up against other molecules, going about the business of life. Each one is perfect right down to the last atom. The workings are so exquisite that changing the location or identity of any atom would cause damage. Over the past century we have learned about the workings of these biological nanomachines to an incredible level of detail, and the benefits of this knowledge are beginning to be felt in medicine. In coming decades we will learn to modify and adapt this machinery to extend the quality and length of life. Biotechnology was the first nanotechnology, and it has a long way yet to go.