The only new people in my platoon were Luthuli and Heyrovsky. From Wordnik.com. [The Forever War]
Heyrovsky has lectured on polarography in the United States of. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
Heyrovsky started his university career as assistant to Professor. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
Heyrovsky let the mercury flow through a glass capillary and weighed the drops. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Heyrovsky from Prague in 1959 for his development of polarographic methods of analysis. From Wordnik.com. [The Nobel Prize in Chemistry: The Development of Modern Chemistry] Reference
Jaroslav Heyrovsky was born in Prague on 20th December, 1890, the fifth child of Leopold. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
Heyrovsky found that this device could be used for something much more important than the original problem. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Heyrovsky also has elaborated modifications of his method which are extremely valuable for special kinds of investigations. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
In 1926 Professor Heyrovsky married Marie Koranová, and there are two children of the marriage, a daughter, Judith, and a son, Michael. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
Jaroslav Heyrovsky that he should study certain irregularities in connection with the capillarity of mercury and attempt to disclose their origin. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Heyrovsky together with his Japanese collaborator Shikata built an apparatus which registered how these electric currents varied with the tension applied. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Heyrovsky and his collaborators, at home and abroad, disclosed the theoretical foundations of the methods and worked out its applications to more and more types of problems. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
During the First World War Heyrovsky did his war service in a military hospital as dispensing chemist and radiologist, which enabled him to continue his studies and to take his Ph.D. degree in Prague in 1918 and D.Sc. in London in 1921. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
When Heyrovsky put a small electric tension between the dropping mercury and that collecting at the bottom, he found in accordance with earlier experience that the current increased by steps when the tension was raised over certain fixed values. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Heyrovsky, Professor of Roman Law at the Czech University of. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
Jaroslav Heyrovsky died on March 27, 1967. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
Heyrovsky. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
Professor Heyrovsky. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1959 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Nobel Lecture. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Nobel Lecture] Reference
Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Banquet Speech. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Banquet Speech] Reference
Jaroslav Heyrovsky. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Banquet Speech] Reference
1959 - Jaroslav Heyrovsky. From Wordnik.com. [All Nobel Laureates in Chemistry] Reference
Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography. From Wordnik.com. [Jaroslav Heyrovsky - Biography] Reference
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