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  2. Self-assembly and nanotechnology | The Reinhardt group

    https://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/group/reinhardt/research/self-assembly-and-nanotechnology
    29 Jun 2024: We develop simple models to try to understand complex self-assembly. In particular, DNA offers a very exciting possibility in nanotechnology: because of the specificity of its (WatsonCrick) pairings, bonding ... DOI:Direct observation and rational
  3. £10m funding for advanced materials research awarded to the…

    https://www.energy.cam.ac.uk/news-and-events/news/ps10m-funding-for-advanced-materials-research-awarded-to-the-university-of-cambridge-1
    29 Jun 2024: Much of the Royce Equipment will be housed within the Maxwell Centre, in the Cavendish Laboratory (Department of Physics), which is famous for the discovery of the structure of DNA (Crick ... and Watson), but brings together researchers from Engineering,
  4. Preprint typeset in JHEP style - HYPER VERSION Lent ...

    www.damtp.cam.ac.uk/user/tong/relativity/dynrel.pdf
    9 Apr 2024: It remains one. of the most authoritative and scholarly accounts of special relativity. ... large ship, and have with you there some flies, butterflies, and other small.
  5. https://www.medschl.cam.ac.uk/tag/lmb/feed/

    https://www.medschl.cam.ac.uk/tag/lmb/feed/
    23 Feb 2024: ten Nobel Prizes, including Fred Sanger (1958 and 1980), Max Perutz and John Kendrew (1962), Jim Watson and Francis Crick (1962) and most recently, Venki Ramakrishnan (2009)./p div ... 100vw, 883px" /p id="caption-attachment-2554"
  6. New Blue Plaque recognises contribution of Rosalind Franklin to DNA…

    https://www.corpus.cam.ac.uk/articles/new-blue-plaque-recognises-contribution-rosalind-franklin-dna-breakthrough
    Thumbnail for New Blue Plaque recognises contribution of Rosalind Franklin to DNA breakthrough | Corpus Christi College University of Cambridge 27 Jun 2024: to recognise the work of Franklin, Maurice Wilkins and others, as well as that of Crick and Watson.”. ... Crick and Watson found themselves sharing an office in the Cavendish and an enthusiasm for this puzzle.
  7. Introduction UKRI Medical Research Council (MRC) scientists in…

    https://www.mrl.ims.cam.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/ACTIVITY-BOOK-2020.pdf
    15 Feb 2024: most at risk of developing cancer and (3) developing ways of early intervention. ... This structure was discovered by LMB scientists, James Watson and Francis Crick, following work by Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins.
  8. Mr Michael J Prichard | Squire Law Library

    https://www.squire.law.cam.ac.uk/eminent-scholars-archive/mr-michael-j-prichard
    29 Jun 2024: King’s: his passion for the law and his exciting lectures), Glanville Williams. ... 4. (LSE: his lectures were very precise and clearly expounded) and Herbert Jolowicz.
  9. Cambridge Evolutionary Genetics Symposium | Department of Zoology

    https://www.zoo.cam.ac.uk/news/cambridge-evolutionary-genetics-symposium
    30 Jun 2024: thousand. Evolution is slow, and this mismatch underlies many of our health problems.”. ... Cambridge academics Sir Ronald Fisher and JBS Haldane, together with Sewall Wright, produced ground-breaking work in population genetics in the early 1900s, and
  10. Nanopore sensors for multiplexed protein identification | Biological…

    https://www.bss.phy.cam.ac.uk/news/nanopore-sensors-for-multiplexed-protein-identification
    29 Jun 2024: Based on the programmable nature of Watson-Crick base pairing, Dr Bell designed a library of DNA structures. ... This approach provides a new avenue in protein sensing with nanopores since it simultaneously combines digitally encoded multi-analyte
  11. DNA - AT base pair

    https://www-jmg.ch.cam.ac.uk/data/molecules/misc/dna_atpair.html
    6 May 2024: J. D. Watson and F. H. C. Crick. Nature 1953, 171, 737-738.
  12. Biographies – Newnham College

    https://newn.cam.ac.uk/about/history/biographies/
    7 Jun 2024: She had a lifelong passion for interior design and the renovation of houses. ... Her colleague Wilkins showed the photo (without Rosalind’s knowledge) to James Watson from Cambridge: this enabled Watson and his colleague Crick to take the speculative
  13. George Salt | Department of Zoology

    https://www.zoo.cam.ac.uk/alumni/biographies-of-zoologists/george-salt
    30 Jun 2024: and sing folk songs in bad German to pay for his night’s keep?’. ... Barrington-Brown (perhaps best known for his photographs of Crick and Watson in the old Cavendish Austin Building with their model of the DNA molecule).
  14. Wearing My Hat (or not) as Editor of… | The Woolf Institute

    https://www.woolf.cam.ac.uk/blog/wearing-my-hat-or-not-as-editor-of-transactions
    Thumbnail for Wearing My Hat (or not) as Editor of… | The Woolf Institute 28 Jun 2024: The West End play, Photograph 51, about scientist Rosalind Franklin, who co-discovered the double-helix of DNA but was denied a share of Watson and Crick's Nobel Prize, contains ... The JHSE is not only old and venerable. It is rather oddly constituted.
  15. James Arthur Ramsay | Department of Zoology

    https://www.zoo.cam.ac.uk/alumni/biographies-of-zoologists/james-arthur-ramsay
    30 Jun 2024: As he remarks himself, this was the year before Watson and Crick reported on the structure of DNA, and so revision in 1968 was unsurprising. ... fondly recalled by many alumni, and who is still working in the Department).
  16. Café Synthetique Christmas Quiz Answers | Engineering Biology in…

    https://www.engbio.cam.ac.uk/events/cafe-synthetique/cafe-synthetique-christmas-quiz-answers
    30 Jun 2024: 2. Why did Jim Watson’s mother try to prevent him from going to Cambridge in 1951? ... 4. In Watson and Crick’s 1953 letter to Nature, who drew the diagram of the double helix?
  17. Cafe Synthetique looks at DNA self assembly, origami and more |…

    https://www.engbio.cam.ac.uk/news/cafe-synthetique-looks-at-dna-self-assembly-origami-and-more
    30 Jun 2024: Search site. Engineering Biology in Cambridge. Cafe Synthetique looks at DNA self assembly, origami and more. ... A combination of selective Watson-Crick interactions and robust hydrophobic forces can be realised in amphiphilic nanostructures where
  18. Lent Term 2019 | Department of History and Philosophy of Science

    https://www.hps.cam.ac.uk/news-events/seminars-reading-groups/archive/lent2019
    29 Jun 2024: 14 March. Charlotte Bigg (CNRS Paris). The view from here, there and nowhere? ... data from the 1919 eclipse and Watson and Crick's determination of the structure of DNA.
  19. DNA (ten base pairs)

    https://www-jmg.ch.cam.ac.uk/data/molecules/misc/dna10.html
    6 May 2024: J. D. Watson and F. H. C. Crick. Nature 1953, 171, 737-738.
  20. Search Publications | Publications

    https://publications.ch.cam.ac.uk/publications-search?page=309
    29 Jun 2024: Please note: all images attached to a publication will be visible on Department websites (including some research group sites, and the Department website). ... If you specify more than one search option (e.g. you search for both "Authors" and "Paper title
  21. The Predatory Paradox: Ethics, Politics, and Practices in…

    https://api-thoth-arch.lib.cam.ac.uk/server/api/core/bitstreams/52bfc3d4-8c52-42ce-9001-335ac1f680d3/content
    16 May 2024: Crick (Watson and Crick 1953) published an article in Nature that established their double-helix model of DNA as the one that would be accepted as scientific fact for generations to ... At the time it was published, Avery and his coauthors’ paper

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