A
Primer on the NMR of Biological Macromolecules
Details on the technique that revolutionized biology.
900,000
Daltons
TSRI's newest Nobel laureate Kurt Wüthrich pushes the
limits of NMR technology. (News&Views, January
21, 2002)
The
World's Most Powerful NMR Magnet
A 900 MHz NMR machine arrived at TSRI last year, giving scientists
on campus a powerful new tool to solve biological problems.
(News&Views, June 18, 2001)
Press
Reports
Media from around the world cover the announcement of the
2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
2001
Nobel Watch
Stories from last year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry, awarded
to another TSRI scientist, K. Barry Sharpless. (News&Views,
Special Edition)
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Kurt
Wüthrich Wins 2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; Second Nobel
Prize in a Row for TSRI
TSRI investigator Kurt Wüthrich has been awarded the
2002 Nobel Prize in Chemistry "for his development of
nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy for determining the
three-dimensional structure of biological macromolecules in
solution."
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