Sentences with phrase «founded by chemist»

Blissoma holistic skincare: This natural skincare line was founded by chemist Julie Longyear, and I've loved every product I've tried.
A New class of «sugar mimics» has been found by chemists in the US.

Not exact matches

Two centuries later, France came around to the charms of the controversial tuber, thanks largely to a ruse engineered by military chemist and botanist Antoine - Augustin Parmentier and King Louis XVI, who was keen to find nutritious foods that could combat famine.
According to a study by chemist Christopher H. Hendon in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, minerals found in tap water can greatly enhance your cup of coffee.
The study, led by Duke University chemist Heather Stapleton, found that foam samples from more than 40 percent of 102 couches bought from 1985 to 2010 contained the chemical, known as chlorinated...
Co-authored by David Catling, an atmospheric chemist at the University of Washington in Seattle, the study peers deep into our planet's history to devise a novel recipe for finding single - celled life on faraway worlds in the not - too - distant future.
Readers of the Chronicle of Higher Education last year followed the story of Joshua and Kathleen, a psychologist and a chemist, as they sought, publicly but anonymously, to end 4 years of professional separation by finding work in the same area.
Led by Ken Buesseler, a senior scientist and marine chemist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), the team found that a small fraction of contaminated seafloor sediments off Fukushima are moved offshore by typhoons that resuspend radioactive particles in the water, which then travel laterally with southeasterly currents into the Pacific Ocean.
But Eastoe and other chemists are creating genuine supersoaps by finding ways to get surfactant molecules to lose their foamy properties [pdf] under particular conditions so that the foam can, in effect, be turned off and on at will.
«Foreign students or workers in the U.S.A. for the first time are frequently disarmed by the informality of research and teaching laboratories,» says Mel Schiavelli, an organic chemist and founding president of Harrisburg University of Science and Technology in Pennsylvania.
To find an all - purpose solution, researchers led by Omar Yaghi, a chemist at the University of California, Berkeley, turned to a family of crystalline powders called metal organic frameworks, or MOFs.
Now a team led by Thomas Carell, an organic chemist at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in Germany, may have found a method.
It turns out, a team of chemists has found, this can be achieved by creating particles that have both playdough and Lego traits.
Kim Cecil, a chemist and professor of radiology at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and an expert on the impact of lead on the brain, has found that whereas the language - function region of the brain's left hemisphere is perturbed by chronic lead exposure, corresponding regions in its right hemisphere show increased activation in the presence of blood lead levels above current levels of concern.
A team of chemists from University of Montreal led by Pierre Chaurand then used an advanced mass spectrometry technique to identify these fat deposits as triglycerides enriched with specific fatty acids, which can also be found in animal fats and vegetable oils.
By measuring the isotopes in multiple ways, the chemists found carbonates depleted in carbon - 13 and enriched in oxygen - 18.
To find the best MOF for xenon and krypton separation, computational chemists led by Haranczyk and Smit screened 125,000 possible MOFs for their ability to trap the gases.
There are other high - tech suggestions also, including some by chemists (like Professor Rob Capon and Dr Andrew Hayes, at the University of Queensland) that involve finding out more about the toad's basic physiology and biochemistry.
You can sometimes find yourself writing a sentence along the lines of «She picked up the telephone, which was made of Bakelite, a substance first developed in 1907 by a Belgian chemist...» At which point you have to stop and try to forget everything you know about early plastic manufacture.
Cardinal Pet Care has a long history — the company was founded in 1948, right after World War II, by a chemist and a salesmen.
That plants emit oxygen has long been known — since 1774, in fact, when Joseph Priestley, a British chemist, found a mouse not too «inconvenienced» by being trapped inside a bell - jar with a mint plant.
You will ALL find that the fields listed (60 signatories include mathematicians, economists, anthropologists, geneticists, chemists, engineers and other interesting fields) ALL present situations that present SCIENCE that is contradicted by the attempts to platform a supposed «greenhouse effect» and the illusion of «science activity» made to appear as «climate science research».
And not long after that, the Swedish chemist, Svante Arrhenius, found out that the climate is heavily regulated by one of the greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide, whose mass represents four ten - thousands of our atmosphere — a tiny trace.
MBDC is a firm founded in 1995 by world - renowned architect William McDonough and chemist Dr. Michael Braungart.
A huge gain in this direction has now been made by a team of chemists at the University of California, Riverside that has found an ingenious way to make solar energy conversion more efficient.
«ELEMENT - ary: Chemist finds just the right legal balance,» published on December 4th and written by Paul Janczewski.
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