From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spanish chemist
In this
Spanish name, the first or paternal
surname is
Ballester and the second or maternal family name is
Boix.
Manuel Ballester Boix (born in
Barcelona on 27 June 1919; died 5 April 2005) was a Spanish chemist.
Biography
He received his degree at the
University of Barcelona in 1944, his doctorate in Madrid, and finished his training at
Harvard University in 1951.
[1] In 1944 he formed a team at the
Spanish National Research Council. His work has largely been in kinetics and
organic chemistry.
[2]
Awards
References
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Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research |
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- 1981:
Alberto Sols
- 1982:
Manuel Ballester
- 1983:
Luis Antonio Santaló Sors
- 1984:
Antonio Garcia-Bellido
- 1985:
David Vázquez Martínez and
Emilio Rosenblueth
- 1986:
Antonio González González
- 1987:
Jacinto Convit and
Pablo Rudomín
- 1988:
Manuel Cardona and
Marcos Moshinsky
- 1989:
Guido Münch
- 1990:
Santiago Grisolía and
Salvador Moncada
- 1991:
Francisco Bolívar Zapata
- 1992:
Federico García Moliner
- 1993:
Amable Liñán
- 1994:
Manuel Patarroyo
- 1995:
Manuel Losada Villasante and
Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad of Costa Rica
- 1996:
Valentín Fuster
- 1997:
Atapuerca research team
- 1998:
Emilio Méndez Pérez and
Pedro Miguel Echenique Landiríbar
- 1999:
Ricardo Miledi and
Enrique Moreno González
- 2000:
Robert Gallo and
Luc Montagnier
- 2001:
Craig Venter,
John Sulston,
Francis Collins,
Hamilton Smith and
Jean Weissenbach
- 2002:
Lawrence Roberts,
Robert E. Kahn,
Vinton Cerf and
Tim Berners-Lee
- 2003:
Jane Goodall
- 2004:
Judah Folkman,
Tony Hunter,
Joan Massagué,
Bert Vogelstein and
Robert Weinberg
- 2005:
Antonio Damasio
- 2006:
Juan Ignacio Cirac
- 2007:
Peter Lawrence and
Ginés Morata
- 2008:
Sumio Iijima,
Shuji Nakamura,
Robert Langer,
George M. Whitesides and
Tobin Marks
- 2009:
Martin Cooper and
Raymond Tomlinson
- 2010:
David Julius,
Baruch Minke and
Linda Watkins
- 2011:
Joseph Altman,
Arturo Álvarez-Buylla and
Giacomo Rizzolatti
- 2012:
Gregory Winter and
Richard A. Lerner
- 2013:
Peter Higgs,
François Englert and
European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN
- 2014:
Avelino Corma Canós,
Mark E. Davis and
Galen D. Stucky
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Princess of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research |
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- 2015:
Emmanuelle Charpentier and
Jennifer Doudna
- 2016:
Hugh Herr
- 2017:
Rainer Weiss,
Kip S. Thorne,
Barry C. Barish and the
LIGO Scientific Collaboration
- 2018:
Svante Pääbo
- 2019:
Joanne Chory and
Sandra Myrna Díaz
- 2020:
Yves Meyer,
Ingrid Daubechies,
Terence Tao and
Emmanuel Candès
- 2021:
Katalin Karikó,
Drew Weissman,
Philip Felgner,
Uğur Şahin,
Özlem Türeci,
Derrick Rossi and
Sarah Gilbert
- 2022:
Geoffrey Hinton,
Yann LeCun,
Yoshua Bengio and
Demis Hassabis
- 2023:
Jeffrey I. Gordon,
Everett Peter Greenberg and
Bonnie Bassler
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