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Darleane C. Hoffman was a chemist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory for a year and then joined her husband at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory where—after an extensive delay where she was denied access to the laboratory because the human resources department refused to believe that a woman could be a chemist [7] —she began as a staff member in 1953.
Dr. Darleane C. Hoffman (1926–), American nuclear chemist among researchers who confirmed existence of Seaborgium, element 106 [32] Dr. Jennie S. Hwang, first woman to receive Ph.D. from Case Western Reserve University's Materials Science and Engineering; expert in surface-mount technology [33]
Darleane C. Hoffman (born 1926), American Nuclear chemist; Icie Hoobler (1892–1984), American biochemist; Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910–1994), British crystallographer, Nobel prize in chemistry 1964; Donna M. Huryn, American organic chemist; Clara Immerwahr (1870–1915), German chemist; Allene Rosalind Jeanes (1906–1995), American ...
Earnest D. Adams; Peter D. Adams; David Adler; Robert S. Allgaier; John C. Allred; Charles H. Anderson; Sam M. Austin; Robert W. Balluffi; Gene A. Baraff; Elizabeth U ...
Enrico Fermi Award. The Enrico Fermi Award is a scientific award conferred by the President of the United States.It is awarded to honor scientists of international stature for their lifetime achievement in the development, use or production of energy.
Darleane C. Hoffman, B.S. 1948, nuclear chemist, part of the team that discovered Seaborgium, faculty senior scientist in the Nuclear Science Division of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, professor in the graduate school at University of California, Berkeley
Darleane C. Hoffman [1] Dawn Angela Shaughnessy is an American radiochemist and principal investigator of the heavy element group at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory . [ 3 ] She was involved in the discovery of five superheavy elements with atomic numbers 114 to 118.
Nuclear chemist Darleane C. Hoffman has credited a freshman-year course taught by Nellie May Naylor with inspiring her pursuit of a scientific career. [10] The co-founder of the Hach Company , Kathryn "Kitty" Hach-Darrow , recalls finding similar inspiration in Naylor.