资讯

100 YEARS after the British scientist Rosalind Franklin's birth, The Economist’s health policy editor Natasha Loder explores her scientific achievements—from photographing the double helix of ...
Rosalind Franklin was a highly skilled X-ray crystallographer by the time John Randall, director at King’s College London, instructed her to research DNA in the college labs in 1951.
Newly discovered documents reveal more about Rosalind Franklin’s role in solving DNA’s structure, ... It's up right now on our YouTube channel. So we'll stick a link to that in the show notes.
Scientist Rosalind Franklin would have 'exploded with fury' if she had been aware James Watson and Francis Crick used her data to help understand the structure of DNA, her younger sister has said.
Rosalind Franklin's Legacy A biologist spells out why the creator of "Photo 51" should have shared the Nobel with Watson and Crick. Tuesday, April 22, 2003 NOVA ...
Rosalind Franklin was born July 25, 1920, and grew up in a well-known Jewish family in pre-World War II London, and was known in the family for being very clever and outspoken.
A crucial contribution. Rosalind Franklin made a crucial contribution to the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA, but some would say she got a raw deal. Biographer Brenda Maddox called ...
Apr 26, 2023 23:10:00 It is pointed out that female scientist Rosalind Franklin was not a victim who was deprived of the honor of discovering the double helix structure of DNA.
Rosalind Franklin was a chemist and X-ray crystallographer whose data contributed to the discovery of DNA’s molecular structure. That data wasn’t stolen from her, newly uncovered evidence ...