TheBestLinks.com
TheBestLinks.com
Cavendish Laboratory, Biology, DNA, Francis Crick, James D. Watson, Nobel prize ... Print friendly version | Tell a friend
 
Navigation
Search
Toolbox

Cavendish Laboratory

From TheBestLinks.com

The Cavendish Laboratory is the Department of Physics of the University of Cambridge. The Department is itself part of the School of Physical Sciences. It was built in 1873 as a teaching laboratory. It was initially on the New Museums site off Free School Lane, in the centre of Cambridge. After perennial space problems, it moved to Madingley Road in West Cambridge, in the early 1970s.

The Department is named after Henry Cavendish, a famous physicist, and a member of the Dukes of Devonshire branch of the Cavendish family. Another family member, William Cavendish, 7th Duke of Devonshire, was Chancellor of the University, and he gave money to endow the laboratory in memory of his learned relative.

So far, 28 Cavendish researchers have won Nobel prizes.

The Cavendish Laboratory has had important influence on biology, mainly through the application of X-ray crystallography to the study of structures of biological molecules. Francis Crick already worked in the Medical Research Council Unit headed by Max Perutz and housed in the Cavendish Laboratory when Watson came from the U.S.A. and they together discovered the DNA double helix. For their work while in the Cavendish Laboratory they were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 1962.

There is a Cavendish Professorship of Physics.

ja:キャベンディッシュ研究所 zh:卡文迪什实验室

Related links


Top visited 0 of 0 links

[no links posted yet]

>> place link >>

Discussion

Last posted 0 of 0 messages

[no messages posted yet]

>> post message >>

Watch

You can add this article to your own "watchlist" and receive e-mail notification about all changes in this page.
 
   
Innovate it
This page was last modified 11:38, 11 Sep 2004.
  Content is available under GNU Free Documentation License 1.2.
Powered by MediaWiki