The Braggs at Leeds: A Clinical Legacy
Listen now
Description
The lectures formed a part of the Bragg Centenary 2013, a year-long celebration of the important contributions made by William H. Bragg and his son, William L. Bragg, to the development of the technique of X-Ray crystallography, a technique which allowed scientists to understand the structural analysis of materials and for which they were awarded a Nobel prize in 1915. Each lecture, given by staff at the University who have been influenced by the work of the Braggs, addresses a different aspect of the Braggs’ significant scientific legacy and what it means for science today. Bragg Centenary Event. 23rd March 2013, at the University of Leeds. Organised by the Museum of the History of Science, Technology and Medicine. Generously supported by the British Society for the History of Science. In Association with the British Crystallographic Association.
More Episodes
The lectures formed a part of the Bragg Centenary 2013, a year-long celebration of the important contributions made by William H. Bragg and his son, William L. Bragg, to the development of the technique of X-Ray crystallography, a technique which allowed scientists to understand the structural...
Published 09/05/13
The lectures formed a part of the Bragg Centenary 2013, a year-long celebration of the important contributions made by William H. Bragg and his son, William L. Bragg, to the development of the technique of X-Ray crystallography, a technique which allowed scientists to understand the structural...
Published 09/05/13
The lectures formed a part of the Bragg Centenary 2013, a year-long celebration of the important contributions made by William H. Bragg and his son, William L. Bragg, to the development of the technique of X-Ray crystallography, a technique which allowed scientists to understand the structural...
Published 09/05/13