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Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro, Count of Quaregna and Cerreto [1] (/ ˌ æ v ə ˈ ɡ ɑː d r oʊ /, [2] also US: / ˌ ɑː v-/, [3] [4] [5] Italian: [ameˈdɛːo avoˈɡaːdro]; 9 August 1776 – 9 July 1856) was an Italian scientist, most noted for his contribution to molecular theory now known as Avogadro's law, which states that equal volumes of gases under the same conditions of ...
Gospel of Jesus' Wife, recto The Gospel of Jesus' Wife is a forged 4th century papyrus fragment with Coptic text that includes the words, "Jesus said to them, 'my wife...The text received widespread attention when first publicized in 2012 for the implication that some early Christians believed that Jesus was married.
Maria Gaetana Agnesi ... Amedeo Avogadro ... – professor at Leiden University and leader of the university's mesoscopic physics group, established in 1992.
Albert of Jerusalem, OSC (1149 – 14 September 1214), also Albertus Hierosolymitanus, Albertus Vercelensis, Saint Albert, Albert of Vercelli or Alberto Avogadro, [1] was a canon lawyer and saint. He was Bishop of Bobbio and Bishop of Vercelli , and served as mediator and diplomat under Pope Clement III .
Sophie Morel (born 1979), French number theorist and contributor to the Langlands program, first female tenured mathematics professor at Harvard; Eugenie Maria Morenus (1881–1966), American mathematician and professor; Susan Morey, American mathematician specializing in commutative algebra; Carolyn Morgan, American statistician and applied ...
Maria Chudnovsky (born January 6, 1977) is an Israeli-American mathematician working on graph theory and combinatorial optimization. [2] She is a 2012 MacArthur Fellow . [ 3 ]
Karlsruhe Congress (3 to 5 September 1860; in a way, the first international meeting of chemists): on the meeting's last day reprints of Stanislao Cannizzaro's (1826–1910, chemistry professor of Genoa) paper on atomic weights (1858), in which he utilized earlier work by Amedeo Avogadro, were distributed.
Maria Tamargo was born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, in 1951 to Cuban parents. She lived in Havana, Cuba, from 1952 to 1962, at which time she moved with her family to the United States and has lived there ever since. Maria Tamargo received her first degree (B.S.) in chemistry from the University of Puerto Rico in 1972.