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  2. Dorothy Hodgkin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Hodgkin

    Dorothy Mary Crowfoot Hodgkin OM FRS HonFRSC [9] [10] (née Crowfoot; 12 May 1910 – 29 July 1994) was a Nobel Prize-winning English chemist who advanced the technique of X-ray crystallography to determine the structure of biomolecules, which became essential for structural biology.

  3. William Astbury - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Astbury

    Firstly they showed that X-ray crystallography could be used to reveal the regular, ordered structure of DNA – an insight which laid the foundations for the later work of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin, [1] after which the structure of DNA was identified by Francis Crick and James D. Watson in 1953. Secondly, they did this work at a ...

  4. X-ray crystallography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_crystallography

    X-ray crystallography is still the primary method for characterizing the atomic structure of materials and in differentiating materials that appear similar in other experiments. X-ray crystal structures can also help explain unusual electronic or elastic properties of a material, shed light on chemical interactions and processes, or serve as ...

  5. Lawrence Bragg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Bragg

    Portrait of William Lawrence Bragg taken when he was around 40 years old. Sir William Lawrence Bragg (31 March 1890 – 1 July 1971), known as Lawrence Bragg, was an Australian-born British physicist and X-ray crystallographer, discoverer (1912) of Bragg's law of X-ray diffraction, which is basic for the determination of crystal structure.

  6. List of scattering experiments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scattering_experiments

    Davisson–Germer experiment; Gold foil experiments, performed by Geiger and Marsden for Rutherford which discovered the atomic nucleus; Elucidation of the structure of DNA by X-ray crystallography; Discovery of the antiproton at the Bevatron; Discovery of W and Z bosons at CERN; Discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider; MINERνA

  7. William Henry Bragg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Henry_Bragg

    Sir William Henry Bragg (2 July 1862 – 12 March 1942) was an English physicist, chemist, mathematician, and active sportsman who uniquely [1] shared a Nobel Prize with his son Lawrence Bragg – the 1915 Nobel Prize in Physics: "for their services in the analysis of crystal structure by means of X-rays". [2]

  8. Francis Crick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Crick

    Crick was in the right place, in the right frame of mind, at the right time (1949), to join Max Perutz's project at the University of Cambridge, and he began to work on the X-ray crystallography of proteins. [30] X-ray crystallography theoretically offered the opportunity to reveal the molecular structure of large molecules like proteins and ...

  9. Florence Bell (scientist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence_Bell_(scientist)

    Florence Ogilvy Bell (1 May 1913 – 23 November 2000 [3]), later Florence Sawyer, was a British scientist who contributed to the discovery of the structure of DNA. She was an X-ray crystallographer in the lab of William Astbury. In 1938 they published a paper in Nature that described the structure of DNA as a "Pile of Pennies". [4]

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