Wikipedia:Requested articles/Natural sciences
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General science
edit- Vapour diffusion resistance factor - or μ. Used in particular to evaluate the breathability of construction materials. There is a page in French - not in English.
- Third World Technical Scientific Dependency
Global systems science - a new science of large complex systems. e.g. the environment, a business, a national economy- California Academy of Sciences Fellows - founded in 1853, fellows include several members of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and other notable scientists
- Massachusetts Academy of Sciences - founded in 2007, fellows include several Nobel Prize laureates and other notable scientists
- Cephalocentric hypothesis - An idea originating from Ancient Greece that posits that the brain is the center of consciousness. History of Neuropsychology
- The Kavli HUMAN Project - A longitudinal and interdisciplinary research project out of NYU that will be creating a database comprised of data from 10,000 New Yorkers that they hope will improve insights for researchers and New York City residents. (www.kavlihumanproject.org)
- NMIJ (National Metrology Institute of Japan), equivalent to NIST, PTB, NPL, MIKES, Laboratoire national de métrologie et d'essais, etc.
- Van Swinden Laboratory (VSL), the Netherlands' national metrology laboratory
- Morris Loeb Lecture at Harvard, exists in German Morris Loeb Lecture
- Igloo Effect
- ASTM A572 STEEL - Similar to the existing ASTM A36 STEEL page
- Science And Technology In The Thirteen Colonies (more historical information on science in the thirteen colonies)
- contactpointnano.ch (Swiss national contact point for the safe handling of nanomaterials, regulation and knowledge transfer) (https://www.nanopartikel.info/en/switzerland/2599-contactpointnano-ch-en, https: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requested_articles/Natural_sciences#Other_scientists//www.empa.ch/web/s604/contactpointnano, https://www.seco.admin.ch/seco/en/home/seco/nsb-news.msg-id-71137.html, https://swissmaterials.org/angebot/expertennetzwerk/contactpointnano-ch, https://www.m-q.ch/zur-neuen-plattform-contactpointnano-ch/)
Canadian Scientific and Christian Affiliation(Sister organization of American Scientific Affiliation."The Canadian Scientific and Christian Affiliation (CSCA) is a fellowship of scientists and those interested in science, who want to understand how science should best interact with the life-giving Christian tradition." [3]) siyaset haberlerieğitim haberleriteknoloji haberlerigüncel haberlerhaber sitesi- Spanish Institute of Oceanography - [1] (from page Taningia danae)
- High risk research
- List of things named after scientists: here
Astronomy and cosmology
editRequests for articles about astronomy and cosmology are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Spacecraft
editRequests for articles about spacecraft are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Biology
editRequests for articles about biology are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Chemistry, chemicals and labs
editRequests for articles about chemistry are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Environment and geology
editRequests for articles about environment and geology are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Journals and trade publications
edit- American Recycler Newspaper - [4]
- Behavioural Public Policy - Cambridge
- BioFuels Journal - [5]
- Citation Classic - [6]
- Diaspora (journal) - Academic journal; ISSN 1044-2057; published by University of Toronto Press [7]
- Digital Video (magazine) - American trade publication; published by NewBay Media; ISSN 1541-0943; OCLC 773019651; [8]
- Free Neuropathology - Neuropathological open-access journal founded in 2020 by the former editor of Acta Neuropathologica. - [9]
- Gunluk.org - Fast, free and ad-free natural science journal. - [10]
- International Journal of Product Development (IJPD) - [11]
- International Journal of Pure and Applied Mathematics
- Japanese Journal of Ichthyology
- Journal of Breath Research - ISSN 1752-7155; published by IOP Publishing[12]
- Journal of Legal Anthropology
- Journal of Network and Computer Applications - [13]
- Journal of Neural Engineering - ISSN 1741-2560; published by IOP Publishing[14]
- Keystone Symposia (Please aggregate important times already mentioned in the wikipedia files for Keystone Symposia so that the important scientific discoveries, conversations, and summits are in one place. I have to continually find specific mentions using the search function to get the information I need. We should probably also do this for FASEB and other scientific summits that have contributed to the development of scientific journals.) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Search?search=keystone+symposia&go=Go&ns0=1)
- Kiva or KIVA; Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History. ISSN 0023-1940, 2051-6177: JSTOR (as Kiva) Not to be confused with similarly named Southwestern Journal of AnthropologyJSTOR Taylor & Francis (publishing partner) (as KIVA)Taylor & Francis, Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society (affiliated) (as Kiva)Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society; University of Colorado (as KIVA)University of Colorado Boulder; Ingenta Connect (as KIVA)Ingenta; Academia.edu hosted paper using a T&F citationAcademia.edu.
- Mathematica Scandinavica - peer reviewed green open access journal, ISSN 0025-5521 (print) ISSN 1903-1807 (online), [15], listed in Ulrichs, indexed by MathSciNet, published continuously since 1953
- Microbial Cell (Austrian peer-reviewed open-access Journal published by Shared Science Publishers, monthly issues in English language since 2014, indexed in ESCI, DOAJ, PMC, Web of Science, ISSN/eISSN 2311-2638) (Journal WebsiteScopus Journal InformationArchive of Microbial Cell Articles in Pubmed PMCGerman wikipedia entry Entry on scimago SJR journal and country rank website DOAJ entry and further information Sherpa Romeo entry)
- National Geographic Style Manual - [16]
- Physics (defunct journal, 1964-1968); published by Physics Publishing Company. This journal published several important papers, including John Stewart Bell's paper on the EPR paradox.[2] Its being defunct is mentioned in [3] and at [17] and in the article.[4] The American Physical Society hosts an archive of it at https://journals.aps.org/ppf/ however it is pretty hard to learn of it because "physics" is not a very useful search term. Thus a Wikipedia disambiguation page would help scholars and students find the archive. Its also interesting because it was an experiment in paying physicists for their articles, and one of its editors was Nobel Laureate Philip Warren Anderson [5] There is an interview with Anderson describing the birth of the journal at [6]
- Physiological Measurement - ISSN 0967-3334; published by IOP Publishing and Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine [18]
- Poor Will's Almanack - Published almanac written by William Felker
- Revue Scientifique - article on French Wikipedia: w:fr:La Revue scientifique
- ScienceAsia - ISSN 1513-1874; peer-reviewed journal published bimonthly by the Science Society of Thailand and the National Research Council of Thailand [19]
- Science in Context
- Urology Times - ISSN 0093-9722; OCLC 149664581; published by Advanstar Communications; [20]
Materials science
edit- Caloric materials have major potential applications as solid refrigerants; see [21], [22], [23]
- Cold dwell fatigue which caused the Ti-6-4 alloy part failure in Air France Flight 66
- Copper titanium alloy - Newly Developed Alloy by India's Defense Research and Development Organization that is similar to Copper Beryllium ([24], [25])
- Covetics / Covetic nanomaterials - class of metal-carbon composites fabricated with high power electrical current in the liquid metal-carbon mixture (A review of covetics – current understanding and future perspectives)
- Hand facer tools and bumper tools. Hand facers and bumper tools are tools that were used to create the smooth surface of Mount Rushmore, October 4, 1927 - October 31, 1941. Source: https://www.nps.gov/moru/learn/historyculture/carving-history.htm
- Quenching and partitioning steel is a high strength steel in use in the automobile industry for its structural and energy absorption characteristics: Chapter on Q&P steel, "quenching and partitioning" process: Background and recent progress (full pdf
- Tensile modulus of elasticity
Medicine
editRequests for articles about medicine are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Physical science
editA–M
edit- 2CDM model of dark matter – An effective model of two-component flavor mixed dark matter ([26])
- Alignment layers – used to induce molecular alignment in liquid crystals
- Argentaffin cells
- Atmospheric iron
- Baking contrast unit
- Barium sodium niobate AKA Banana
- Budeyko approximation
- Clogston cable
- Cloud drop size distribution ([27])
- Calcium in nature – at least be in the article!
- Cosmic Call 1 (1999) Cosmic Call
- Coherent superposition - relationship to lenseless laser focusing
- Conoscopic holography – the optical interference effect produced by doubly refracting crystals illuminated with convergent polarised light rays
- Core saturation calculation – how to calculate the amount of saturated fluids in a core sample
- Critical cues
- Crystalline gas, a peculiar state of solid 1,1,1-Trichloroethane in which the intermolecular distances are large. Reference: "Crystalline gas of 1,1,1-trichloroethane", CrystEngComm, 2011, 13, 396
- Degree of compression – thermodynamics principle in chemistry
- Depletion attraction
- Deygout
- Diode laser spectroscopy – I would like to see/help write an article stub
- Dysoxic
- Excited state absorption (ESA) – an optical phenomenon
- Exciton blocking layer (EBL) – used in organic photovoltaic devices
- Fortrat diagram – an important plot in molecular spectroscopy
- Friederichs model – referring to a particular regime of dynamics in microscopic theory of irreversible processes
- G-Jitter – subtopic microgravity; a vibration which is common to all large orbiting spacecraft
- Gauge variable – does this refer to the work of Gerard 't Hooft or something more general?
- Gauss dynamics
- Goldberger Treiman relation – a well-known relation in nuclear physics and particle physics
- Grinberg-Zylberbaum experiment – [28]
- Hele-Shaw cell
- Heterotrophic absorber
- Induced coupled plasma mass spectroscopy
- Instrument science – The design and engineering of scientific instruments
- Keplerate - a structure containing both Platonic and Archimedean solids, one inside the other (not a Kepler solid)
- Langmuir-Hinshelwood Kinetics
- Liganding atoms - discussed at [29] related to Non-bonded Interactions
- Light-profile - astronomy, used in Elliptical galaxy
- Lists of things named after (physical) scientists [Category]- see here, here
- Low multipole anomaly - of power spectrum of cosmic background radiation or CMB
- Luciano S. Méndez - Elizabeth Ann Rauscher, regarding her article on Consciousness and the New Physics (her site)
- Lunar fluorescence
- Magmatter - [30]
- Magnetic viscosity - [31]
- Model Hamiltonian
- Munevera Zulfikarpašić (First academically educated Bosniaks woman Master of Pharmacy in World War II (from 1944)
N–Z
edit- Nebraska ice aka Two dimensional bilayer ice I [32]
- Neutronization – combination of electrons and protons into neutrons, especially regards to NS formation
- Nuclear hyperpolarization
- Nuclear magnetic resonance gyroscope
- Optical relay
- Optical syrup
- Prorennin
- Photoluminescence quenching – a method of preventing newly created excitons from recombining and re-emitting a photon
- Photon deflection
- Piezoceramic transducer
- Piezoresistive transducer
- Polydimethylsiloxane linear polymer
- Post absorptive state – body's use of stored nutrients as energy
- Projection postulate – Lüders-Von Neuman
- Quantum polarization shift communications
- Radiofrequency quadrapole accelerator
- Regioregular – what does the word mean and in what contexts is it used
- Rheometric scientific
- Rheometrics
- Rouse model for polymer chains
- Samarium–iron–nitride magnet aka SmFeN, complementing the other two classes of modern magnetic materials, Neodymium magnet and Samarium–cobalt magnet
- Sander Geophysics
- SEMTech Solutions Inc. – [33]
- SH-wave - type of shear wave
- Solar laser
- Spectrum of helium (See Hyperphysics)
- Spin alignment echo (SAE) – technique in solid state NMR (maybe as in (Hafner et al., Meas. Sci Tech., 1991))
- Spin gap
- Splay nematic phase a type of nematic liquid crystal which is both polar and ferroelectric (see Mertelj et al, Phys. Rev. X, 2018, and Sebastián et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2020)
- Strutt-Ince Stability Diagram (also known as Strutt-Ince Stability Chart) [34]
- Subcooled vapor or supercooled vapor - we only have articles for superheated liquids and supercooled liquids; Subcooling only covers liquids below their boiling points (in HVAC terminology).
- Supermapping
- Surface Brillouin zone
- Surface tension of ice
- SV-wave - type of shear wave
- Symmetric fission
- Thermovoltaic cells
- Thermochronometry – [35] (content is public domain)
- Titanium dating methods
- Varicose wave
- Vector electromagnetics at the focus of high numerical aperture optical systems
- Vibrational echo
- Vladislav Krayevsky
- Water expander trick
- Willard water (also known as Catalyst altered water) – associated with John W. Willard
Physics
editRequests for articles about physics are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Scientists and people in science
edit- Mikayel G. Melkumyan (Dr. Mikayel Melkumyan is an Armenian earthquake engineer who has dedicated himself to strengthening the buildings across Armenia and the world against devastating earthquakes. Through his research work he has created the Melkumyan Model, a hysteresis model that models the shear behavior of rigid reinforced concrete structures. He has reconstructed multiple buildings in Armenia and his technologies are being used in various countries. His work put Armenia second in the world after Japan for most seismically isolated buildings per capita. Dr. Mikayel Melkumyan is a distinguished professor and academic, with memberships in various scientific societies and associations.[36] [37] [38] [39] [40] [41] [42] [43] [44] [45]
- Clive D. Rodgers (Dr Clive Rodgers BA, PhD Cantab is an Atmospheric Physicist who won the symons gold medal, The Society’s awards for excellence in meteorology are held in high regard across the international community. With a BA in Maths and Physics, University of Cambridge. PhD, Cambridge. Reader in Physics at Oxford until 2001, now retired but still research active. Radiative transfer, molecular spectroscopy, the application of estimation theory to the inverse problem of radiative transfer, and the application of satellite data to stratospheric and mesospheric dynamics and chemistry. Has been Co-Investigator on several Oxford satellite instruments, and most recently on two instruments flying on NASA's Aura satellite of the Earth Observing System, the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder (Oxford and NCAR) and the Tropospheric Emission Sounder (JPL).) [46] [47] [48]
- Mathieu Lapôtre (Planetary geologist, Assistant Professor in Geological Sciences at Stanford University. Discovered a new type of ripples on Mars. Was part of the science team that operates NASA's Curiosity rover. Is interested in geological processes that shape the surfaces of planets and how they vary from planet to planet. He also has interests in the geology of the Earth before complex life evolved. He has published over 30 papers including in Science, Nature, Nature Geoscience, and Nature Reviews Earth & Environment. He received several awards including the American Geophysical Union's Luna Leopold Early Career Award and is a Kavli Fellow of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.) [49] [50]
- Giulia Bassani (Space Ambassador, public speaker, science communicator, sci-fi novels writer, aspiring astronaut and aerospace engineering student at Polytechnic of Turin. Mainly known as Astro Giulia.) [51] [52] [53] [54]
- Petros Koutrakis - a Greek environmental scientist, researcher, and head of the Exposure, Epidemiology, and Risk Program at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. He is known for his contribution to air pollution epidemiology and creation of personal ozone monitors, ambient particle concentrators, high-volume samplers, and continuous fine particle measurement techniques. [55] Fracking [56] [57]
- Richard Saitz - (June 12, 2020 Richard Saitz MD MPH DFASAM FACP @unhealthyalcdrg Chair and Professor of Community Health Sciences at Boston University - BU - School of Public Health and Professor of Medicine at BU School of Medicine. President, International Society of Addiction Journal Editors. Associate Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association. Editor-in-Chief Journal of Addiction Medicine. Leading international scientist and research expert in screening and brief intervention for alcohol and other drug use, integrated care -addiction and general health-, expert at the intersection of people with unhealthy alcohol and other drug use and general health care. Advocate for the use of accurate non-stigmatizing terminology in the field of addiction. Research on HIV and alcohol, alcohol use disorder treatment effectiveness, on screening and brief counseling, and on unhealthy substance use as a health risk and condition, not a moral problem. In 2005 coined the term unhealthy alcohol use, which includes the full spectrum of risky use through disorder. Critical of research that concludes and assumes with inadequate methodology that low - moderate - alcohol use has health benefits. Principal investigator Clinical Translational Science Institute at BU.) [58][59][60][61][62]
- Knut Wittkowski
- Rina R. Wehbe Wehbe is a computer scientist with a background in psychology. She researchers Human Computer Interaction (HCI), Games User Research (GUR), and User Experience (UX). Information about Wehbe can be found via the [63] and [64]
- Jeremy Wolfe, professor of Ophthalmology and Radiology, Harvard Medical School, CV [65]
- Mark McGovern, Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Stanford University. [66] [67] [68][69]
- Isabelle Durance, Professor of Integrated Water Sciences at Cardiff University, Director of the Water Research Institute, and freshwater ecologist using a systems approach to address sustainable catchment management. [70], [71], [72], [73], [74], [75]
Astronomers
editRequests for articles about astronomers are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Biologists
editRequests for articles about biologists are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Earth scientists
edit- Zeynab Asadi
- Alberto Behar (born 1967) - NASA earth scientist and professor at Arizona State University
- Anton Brants (or Antoni Brants) - 19th century Dutch zoologist - article on French Wikipedia: fr:Anton Brants
- Colin Bull (currently a redirect) - British-born American polar scientist and one of the founders and directors of what is now the Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center; instrumental in getting women scientists to be allowed to work in areas of Antarctica that were controlled by the Unites States. [76]; [77]; [78]; [79]; [80]; [81]
- Peter A. Burrough (1944–2009) - British soil scientist, author of the first widely used GIS textbook, Principles of Geographical Information Systems for Land Resource Assessment [82]
- Lung Sang Chan - Earth Scientist; Professor at the University of Hong Kong
- Dr. Ugo Dall'asta - curator of Lepidoptera at the Royal Museum for Central Africa. Namesake of Pterophorus dallastai, a species of moth. wikimedia
- Dr. Kenneth De Baets - Belgian invertebrate paleontologist/paleobiologist at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. He is most known for his research on paleoparasitology and cephalopod paleobiology to macroevolution.
- Ian Eisenman - Climate scientist. Professor at Scripps Institution of Oceanography (University of California, San Diego) and inaugural holder of Jerome Namias Chair. AGU Cryosphere Young Investigator Award, 2012 winner. (AGU News, EGU News, Scripps News, CS Monitor, Nature News, Science News, NBC News, university profile, CV)
- Vittorio (Victor) A. Gensini - Meteorology professor at Northern Illinois University and tornado expert. Created a way to predict tornadoes weeks in advance. [83], [84], [85], [86],
- Erle Kauffman (1933–2016) - American geologist and paleontologist who was a curator at the US National Museum and was on the faculties of George Washington University, University of Colorado Boulder, and Indiana University. Was a fellow of the Geological Society of America, the Paleontological Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Won several awards. [87]; [88]; [89]; [90]; [91]; [92]; [93]; [94]
- Glen MacDonald (Glen M. MacDonald) - paleoecologist and biogeographer (gscholar)
- Carl R. McFarland (Carl McFarland) – Geologist active in Washington state [95][96]
- Edward L. Miles - expert on marine policy, one of the first African-American members of the NAS; [97] [98]
- Katie Stack Morgan, geologist and planetary scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a project manager for the Mars Perseverance (rover); [99]; [100];[101]; [102]; [103]; [104]; [105]; [106]; [107]
- Haydn Murray (1924–2015) - American clay mineralogist, foremost expert in the world on applied clay mineralogy. He was the recipient of the Hardinge Award in Industrial Minerals from the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers (AIME; 1976); Marilyn and Sturges W. Bailey Distinguished Member Award from the Clay Minerals Society (1980), which also selected him as its Pioneer in Clay Science Lecturer (2009); and University of Illinois Department of Geology Alumni Achievement Award (2004). In addition to his election to the NAE, he was recognized as a distinguished member of the Society for Mining, and Exploration (SME; 1975) and honorary member of the AIME (2014). He served as president of the Clay Minerals Society (1965–1966), SME (1988), American Institute of Professional Geologists (1991), and Association Internationale pour l’Étude des Argiles (1993–1997). He received an honorary doctor of science degree from the University of Buenos Aires (2000). He is listed on List of members of the National Academy of Engineering (Earth resources). [108]; [109]; [110]; [111]; [112]
- Phillip A. Murry - American paleontologist
- Donna O'Meara (Volcano researcher and author, subject of multiple Nat Geo documentaries) (Amazon author page) (a Nat Geo article) (Scholastic author page) (interview with a newspaper) (Twitter feed)
- György Pantó - Geochemical scientist hu:Pantó György
- Diana C. Roman - American geophysicist and volcanologist. Roman is currently H.O. Wood Chair of Seismology in the Earth and Planets Laboratory at the Carnegie Institution for Science. She is a 2008 recipient of the Walker Medal from the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of Earth's Interior (IAVCEI). She has published over 65 articles in peer-reviewed journals including Nature and Science.
- Gordon de Quetteville Robin (Gordon de Q. Robin) - glaciologist; long-time director, Scott Polar Research Institute [113]
- Demian M. Saffer - American geophysicist. Saffer is professor at the Department of Geological Sciences of The University of Texas at Austin Jackson School of Geosciences and director of the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics. He is prominent in subduction zone research and has been co-chief scientist of five major scientific ocean drilling expeditions to investigate large earthquake faults at the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, including the deepest scientific drilling of a subduction zone. His discoveries include previously undetected shallow slow-slip events at Japan's Nankai fault, lower than expected stresses at Nankai, and that clay minerals in fault gouge play a much smaller role in fault slip behavior than previously thought. He is also an executive steering committee member of Subduction Zones in Four Dimensions (SZ4D), a new multinational initiative to investigate the processes that underlie subduction zone hazards and was one of the architects of its latest report. Among other awards, he was selected to give AGU's Francis Birch Lecture in 2022, its highest honor in the field of tectonophysics. Before being hired to lead UTIG, Saffer was a professor and head of the Department of Geosciences at Penn State University. He has published over 120 articles in peer reviewed journals including Nature and Science. [114]; [115]; [116]
- Pat Shipman - American palaeontologist and science writer
- Terry Tickhill Terrell – Environmental scientist and was one of the first women to reach the South Pole. [117]; [118]; [119]
- Compton J. Tucker - NASA earth scientist, pioneer in the use of satellite crop monitoring (gscholar)
- Desmond Walling (Desmond E. Walling) (born 1945) - British hydrologist and fluvial geomorphologist faculty page gscholar
- Donald U. Wise - structural geologist and planetary geologist; Professor Emeritus of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts at Amherst; Career Contribution Award from the Geological Society of America in 2001. [120] [121]
- Aaron T. Wolf - hydrologist and expert on transboundary water conflict management; Heinz Award recipient in 2015 faculty page [122]
- Mahdi Zare
- Chuanlun Zhang – An American-trained Chinese Biogeochemist and Geomicrobiologist who had worked at many research facilities in both the United States (NASA, ORNL, UGA, Texas A&M) and China (Southern University of Science and Technology) and is an expert in Archaea. He has authored or co-authored nearly 300 high-impact papers. [123]; [124]; [125]; [126]; [127]; [128]; [129]; [130]; [131]; [132]; [133]; [134];
- Vilen Andreyevich Zharikov - geologist
- Julie Loisel American ecosystem ecologist and geographer known for peatland research in the Arctic, Antarctic, southern Patagonia, and the tropics. Working group leader of C-PEAT, a collaborator on the United Nations' Global Peatland Assessment, former associate professor at Texas A&M University, and current associate professor at the University of Nevada, Reno [135]. Lab website and Google Scholar. Received the 2021 Sir Nicholas Shackleton Medal For Outstanding Young Quaternary Scientists Award.
Physicists
editRequests for articles about physicists are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Other scientists
edit- Please check Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biography if you're not sure your scientist is a natural scientist.
- Claus-Michael Lehr - Professor of Biopharmacy and Pharmaceutical Technology, Saarland University, Germany. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claus-Michael_Lehr
- Marco E. Franco - Environmental Toxicologist, 2020 Colgate-Palmolive awardee for Research Training in Alternative Methods, Author, Guatemalan. [136], [137], [138]
- Norris Alderson - Associate Commissioner of Science, FDA
- Robert Lillis - Planetary Space physicist and Geophysicist. Principal Investigator of the NASA ESCAPADE twin satellite mission to Mars, launching in September 2024. Associate Director of the UC Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory. Published >125 articles, mostly on Mars, focusing on: crustal magnetism and the history/loss of Mars' magnetic field, giant impact, volcanoes, atmospheric escape & climate history, and space weather effects on Mars. Discoverer of new kind of aurora ("Mars Sinuous Aurora"). [139][140][141][142][143]
- Chuck Bargeron - invasive species and information technology scientist, Director of Bugwood, EDDMapS, Wild Spotter and Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health at the University of Georgia[7], [8], [9]
- Prof. Dr. Emil Baur (1873-1944) - A ETH Zurich professor who worked on fuel cell, photolysis, gold extraction from seawater etc. [144][145]
- Dr. Pawan Kumar Bharti - Environmental scientist, Antarctician, Writer, Poet, editor
- Dr. Bořivoj Černík (1890-1977) - Mining expert, professor of the Mining University in Příbram. Graduate of the grammar school and the Mining University in Příbram and the Technical University in Prague. He initially worked in coal mines abroad. From 1919 until retirement the teacher of the Mining University in Příbram. - He dealt with the issue of deep mines, especially dusts, shocks, and the gasses of mine gases. He was the designer of an inhalation device, the author of the implementation of forced blowers and milliseconds of rock blasting. He worked as an expert at Rudné doly Příbram and a forensic expert in mining operations. Since 1964 he has worked as a collaborator of the Research Experimental Institute of Therapy in Krč and has been a member of various scientific committees of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences. Author of a number of expert studies, articles and publications on mining issues.
- Günter Bechly, Paleontologist
- William Baker Fahnestock – Nineteenth century scientist. Known for publications on mesmerism.
- Glenn Alan Gaesser - a professor of University of Virginia who specialises in exercise physiology and director of the kinesiology program in the Curry School of Education and writes several books about dieting and obesity
- Giacchino Giuliani - seismologist who predicted the L'Aquila earthquake but was told by Italian gov. to stop warning people
- Otto Hahn (1828-1904) - Mineralogist, geologist; author of Die Urzelle (1879)[10] and Die Meteorite (Chondrite) und ihre Organismen (1880)[11]; contributed to the discussion about the Eozoon canadense[12]; proposed the theory of the organic nature of the chondrites.[13]. Photograph and biography [14].
- Lists of things named after scientists: see here.
- Xu Liu – neuroscientist [146]
- Frank Henry Ludlam - British meteorologist (1920 - 1977) https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Ludlam https://academictree.org/meteorology/peopleinfo.php?pid=942090
- Genrikh Mavrikiyevich Ludvig - philosopher , a scholar of ancient languages, [147] and [148]
- Paul Manger – neuroscientist
- Katsuyuki Ooyama - (1929-2006) Japanese American meteorologist [149]
- Matthew Fontaine Maury Osborne, econophysicist. Performed studies in salmon and rediscovered Louis Bachelier idea of using brownian motion to theorize stock prices using log-normal distributions (instead of normal). MaoGo (talk) 15:02, 23 November 2017 (UTC)
- Sandra Aamodt - American neuroscientist
- Sandro Percario - [Graduated in Biological Sciences - Medical Modality by Escola Paulista de Medicina (1989), masters in Morphology from the Federal University of São Paulo - Brazil (1995), developed the experimental part of the study at Saint Michael's Hospital of the University of Toronto - Canada. Has a PhD in Sciences from the Federal University of São Paulo (2000). Obtained the title of Full Professor of Sciences (DSc) from the Faculty of Medicine of São José do Rio Preto - Brazil (2009). Currently performs Post-Doctoral training at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Atlanta-USA), studying oxidative changes in vectors of malaria. Former Associate Professor of Vascular Surgery at the Federal University of São Paulo from 2000 to 2004. Currently Full Professor of the Institute of Biological Sciences- ICB of the Federal University of Para – UFPA, Brazil. Advisor of Masters and Theses in the Post-Graduation Program of Biology of Infectious and Parasitic Agents of ICB/UFPA, which he is a former Coordinator. Coordinates the Oxidative Stress Research Lab of ICB/UFPA. Experienced in Biochemistry, with emphasis on Oxidative Biochemistry, working mainly on the following topics: free radicals, oxidative stress, antioxidants, malondialdehyde, nitric oxide, atherosclerosis and malaria. Published more than 60 full-text articles in scientific journals and more than 130 communications in annals of scientific events, so far.]
- Gavin Pereira (Epidemiologist. Dr Pereira is an epidemiologist at Curtin University, Australia. He leads an multi-national interdisciplinary team and is a leading authority on impacts of sub-optimal birth spacing. He has held two national research fellowships, national awards and was an expert witness in a recent Australian Federal Senate Committee hearing on stillbirth) (https://staffportal.curtin.edu.au/staff/profile/view/Gavin.F.Pereira/)(https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Senate/Stillbirth_Research_and_Education/Stillbirth/~/media/Committees/stillbirth_ctte/report.pdf)(https://www.nhmrc.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/attachments/grant%20documents/investigator-grants-for-funding-commencing-2020.pdf)
- Steven Phillipson - licensed clinical psychologist (Ph.D.) in New York City, world renowned for his treatment of OCD, especially Pure-O
- Dr. Jules Richard (1863-1945), un scientifique français, directeur du Musée océanographique de Monaco de 1900 à 1945.
- Phillip W. Signor - Co-proposer of the Signor–Lipps effect and former professor at UC Davis. Works by or about Phillip W. Signor in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Dr. MONA SPIEGEL-ADOLF Temple University Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, published 31 papers between 1926 and 1962 on biochemistry and biomedical chemistry. e.g Spiegel-Adolf, M.D. M: Cerebrospinal Fluids in Neurolues. A Physicochemical Study. Stereotact Funct Neurosurg 1939;2:1-14. doi: 10.1159/000106231
- Jose Roberto Trujillo – PhD in neurology and molecular virology from Harvard. Founder and CEO of Trubios LLC, a US-based biotechnology services company focused on the Latin American region offering customized clinical research, commercialization, and venture capital solutions. Also, president and founder of The Medical Sciences Foundation on behalf of the Americas, a young non-profit organization created to promote medical sciences and general health education in Latin America and the Caribbean Basin. [150] [151] [152]
- Dr. Muhammad Moghaddam Vahed - Iranian scientist in Plant Breeding
- John Warltire - 1725-1810[15] Lecturer in Natural Philosophy. Member of Lunar Society.[16] Author of numerous books on Natural and Experimental philosophy.[17] Subject of Painting - "Experiment on a bird in the air pump".[18] Colleague of Erasmus Darwin and Benjamin Franklin.
- Bernard Wood (paleoanthropologist) - Bernard Wood is article on British geophysicist
- Floris Wuyts (PhD Physiology And Biophysics, Neuroscience Floris Wuyts is a well-respected authority on the effects that space has on the brain, He and his team conducted MRI-Scans on Astronauts to quantify changes in the brain. Floris is attributed for accurately quantifying changes in the brain's volume for the first time.) ([153], [154])
- Victor Yvart (3 March 1763 - 19 June 1831); French agronomist (see fr:Victor Yvart). The Last Words (Real and Traditional) of Distinguished Men and Women, Frederic Rowland Marvin, p. 188.
- Malcolm Gavin CBE MBE former principal of Chelsea College of Science and Technology, who was instrumental in getting the college into the University of London,[155] and would go onto become chair of the Royal Dental Hospital School of Surgery. Previously he had worked during the war on Radar, where he was acknowledge with an MBE. He has an entry in who's who [156] which I don't have access to, but not much else I can find.
- Umberto Quattrocchi, author of the bestselling CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names, winner of the prestigious Hanbury Botanical Garden Award. His most recent multi-volume work, CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants, received strong praise as being "... an unparalleled starting place-a tool of first resort for any thoughtful researcher. Quattrocchi and CRC have delivered a dictionary like no other, a learned finger pointing in the right direction." https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umberto_Quattrocchi; https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umberto_Quattrocchi; https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umberto_Quattrocchi
- Krishnendu Roy, Bruce and Bridgitt Evans Dean of Engineering at Vanderbilt University. Bio from Vanderbilt Vanderbilt names esteemed biomedical engineer Krishnendu Roy as next dean of School of Engineering Previous appointments in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Texas Austin (2002-2013) and in Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University (2013-2023). Krishnendu Roy Named Regents' Professor While at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University, he served as Director of the NSF Engineering Research Consortium (ERC) for Cell Manufacturing Technologies (CMaT), the Marcus Center for Therapeutic Cell Characterization and Manufacturing (MC3M), and the Center for ImmunoEngineering. Faces of Research at Georgia Tech: Meet Krishnendu Roy Engineering Research Center Will Help Expand Use of Therapies Based on Living Cells Center Will Develop Consistent Manufacturing Processes for Cell-based Therapies Georgia Tech Selected as NIH Cell Characterization Hub He has been honored by many local and national academic societies and institutions. Biomedical Engineering Faculty Honored at Society for Biomaterials 2023 Awards Krishnendu Roy Elected Fellow of the Controlled Release Society Roy, Andino Take Top Georgia Bio Honors for Impact on Lifesciences Industry AIChE bio His research expertise is in immunoengineering with focuses on biomaterial-based technologies for cell and gene therapies, organ-on-chip for disease modeling, and vaccine development. Researchers At Georgia Tech Receive NIH Funding For Coronavirus Vaccines Roy Lab website at Georgia Institute of Technology/Emory University
References
edit- ^ Aparece en Galicia un calamar gigante de 54 kilos y más de un metro de largo. Europa Press, 11 February 2013. (in Spanish)
- ^ Physics Vol. 1, No. 3, pp. 195-290, 1964 Physics Publishing Co. Printed in the United States
- ^ Bertlmann, Reinhold; Zeilinger, Anton (2016). Quantum [Un]Speakables II: Half a Century of Bell's Theorem. Springer. p. 25.
- ^ 1996 Phys. World 9 (4) 3
- ^ Anderson, P. W.; Matthias, B. T. (1964). "Editorial foreword". Physics Physique Fizika. 1: i. doi:10.1103/PhysicsPhysiqueFizika.1.i.
- ^ "Philip W. Anderson - Session IV". 2014-12-10.
- ^ https://wiki.bugwood.org/User:Bugwood
- ^ https://www.warnell.uga.edu/people/faculty/mr-chuck-bargeron
- ^ http://extension.uga.edu/about/personnel-directory/person.html?pk_id=5937&name=Charles%20T.%20Bargeron
- ^ http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/162778613 Die Urzelle
- ^ http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/245782563 Die Meteorite (Chondrite) und ihre Organismen
- ^ https://archive.org/details/biostor-92657 Is there such a thing as Eozoon canadense?
- ^ https://archive.org/details/THECHONDRITEMETEORITESANDTHEIRORGANISMS The Meteorite (Chondrite) and its Organisms English Translation
- ^ http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=A690&viewtype=text&pageseq=1 Otto Hahn Biography
- ^ "John Warltire". Oxford Index.
- ^ [[1] "Lunar Society of Birmingham"]. 13 March 2016 – via Wikipedia.
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value (help) - ^ "John Warltire Books: Buy Online from Fishpond.com.au".
- ^ [[2] "An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump"]. 11 July 2016 – via Wikipedia.
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