This Biography is about one of the best Chemists Glenn T. Seaborg including his Height, weight, Age & Other Detail…
Biography Of Glenn T. Seaborg | |
Real Name | Glenn T. Seaborg |
Profession | Chemists |
Nick Name | Glenn Theodore Seaborg |
Famous as | Chemist |
Nationality | American Famous American Men |
Personal life of Glenn T. Seaborg | |
Born on | 19 April 1912 |
Birthday | 19th April |
Died At Age | 86 |
Sun Sign | Aries |
Born in | Ishpeming, Michigan |
Died on | 25 February 1999 |
Place of death | Lafayette, California |
Family Background of Glenn T. Seaborg | |
Father | Herman Theodore Seaborg |
Mother | Olivia Erickson Seaborg |
Spouse/Partner | Helen Griggs |
Children | Peter, Lynne, David, Stephen, Eric, Dianne |
Education | UCLA, University of California, Berkeley |
Awards | Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1951) Perkin Medal (1957) Enrico Fermi Award (1959) |
Franklin Medal (1963) Willard Gibbs Award (1966) Priestley Medal (1979) ForMemRS (1985) Vannevar Bush Award (1988) National Medal of Science (1991) | |
Personal Fact of Glenn T. Seaborg | |
Glen T. Seaborg was a Swedish-American nuclear chemist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry for the discovery of Plutonium. He shared the prize with another scientist, Edwin M. McMillan. Till that time Uranium was thought to be the heaviest metal in the Periodic Table. He and others worked together to discover the trans-uranium elements including element 94 and more than 1000 other isotopes which changed Dmitry Mendeleev’s 1869 Periodic table significantly. He suggested the actinide concept of the electronic structure of heavy elements that provided the relationship between the actinides and other elements in the Periodic table. Seaborg and his colleagues discovered nine more new transuranium elements; such as americium, berkelium, curium, californium, fermium, einsteinium, nobelium, and mendelevium. The ninth element element 106 was named seaborgium in his honor which was the first instance of an element to be named after a living person. He was not only famous for fundamental research in nuclear chemistry but also strongly supported and was committed to the education of science. He discovered radioisotopes like cobalt-60 and iodine-131 which are used to treat life-threatening diseases. He was an adviser to ten Presidents starting from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George H. W. Bush. |
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