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"Never Lose Your Nerve! chronicles the ups and downs of a Nobel Laureate's life. Professor Alan J Heeger was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2000 together with Professor Alan G MacDiarmid and Professor Hideki Shirakawa. Filled with humor, this book tells Professor Heeger's story--his love for his family, especially how his wife's love has always been his guiding light, his progress from a young student to an eminent scientist, his passion for the theatre and its impact on his science, his adventures as a successful entrepreneur, and his personal losses. Many think of scientists as risk-adverse individuals but Professor Heeger shows the absolute necessity of risk in research and that scientists are, in fact, risk-addicted, as taking the first, risky step into unfamiliar territory is a step in the right direction towards creativity and great discoveries. Never lose your nerve and you will be rewarded. Life is an exciting adventure and this book clearly demonstrates it, and is for those who are looking to impact others. "Perhaps the greatest pleasure of being a scientist is to have an abstract idea, then to do an experiment (more often a series of experiments is required) that demonstrates the idea was correct; that is, Nature actually behaves as conceived in the mind of the scientist. This process is the essence of creativity in science. I have been fortunate to have experienced this intense pleasure many times in my life."Alan J Heeger."--
Chemists --- Nobel Prize winners. --- Laureates, Nobel --- Nobel laureates --- Nobelists --- Winners of Nobel Prizes --- Award winners --- Heeger, Alan J.
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Some of the most exciting scientific developments in recent years have come not from theoretical physicists, astronomers, or molecular biologists but instead from the chemistry lab. Chemists have created superconducting ceramics for brain scanners, designed liquid crystal flat screens for televisions and watch displays, and made fabrics that change color while you wear them. They have fashioned metals from plastics, drugs from crude oil, and have pinpointed the chemical pollutants affecting our atmosphere and are now searching for remedies for the imperiled planet. Philip Ball, an editor for the prestigious magazine Nature, lets the lay reader into the world of modern chemistry. Here, for example, chemists find new uses for the improbable buckminsterfullerene molecules--60-atom carbon soccerballs, dubbed "buckyballs"--which seem to have applications for everything from lubrication to medicine to electronics. The book is not intended as an introduction to chemistry, but as an accessible survey of recent developments throughout many of the major fields allied with chemistry: from research in traditional areas such as crystallography and spectroscopy to entirely new fields of study such as molecular electronics, artificial enzymes, and "smart" polymer gels. Ball's grand tour along the leading edge of scientific discovery will appeal to all curious readers, with or without any scientific training, to chemistry students looking for future careers, and to practicing chemical researchers looking for information on other specialties within their discipline.
Chemistry. --- Physical sciences --- DNA. --- Heeger, Alan. --- Jerome, Denis. --- acetic acid. --- adenine. --- alkali metals. --- aluminum. --- ammonia. --- antibonding orbitals. --- autocatalysis. --- azobenzene. --- bacteria. --- bilayers. --- biogeochemical cycles. --- carbohydrates. --- carbon dioxide. --- clusters. --- copper. --- diamond. --- electron. --- enantiomers. --- enzymes. --- formaldehyde. --- fractals. --- global warming. --- greenhouse effect. --- hydrocarbons. --- hydrogen bonding. --- infrared radiation. --- interstellar molecules. --- irrational numbers. --- lattice. --- liquid crystals. --- malonic acid. --- metabolism. --- methane. --- nitrogen. --- nucleotides. --- optoelectronics. --- peptide bond. --- phase transitions. --- polarized light. --- potassium. --- quantum mechanics. --- replication. --- semiconductors.
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