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  1. Rosalind Elsie Franklin (født 25. juli 1920, død 16. april 1958) var en britisk kemiker og røntgen-krystallograf, som gjorde betydningsfulde opdagelser af strukturerne i DNA, hvis struktur hun i 1953 bidrog til opdagelsen af. Hun blev kemiker på Cambridge universitetet .

  2. Oct 1, 2023 · Rosalind Franklin was excluded from the Nobel Prize that was awarded for the discovery of DNA's structure. Photo 12/Getty Images. The two most famous prizes in the world are the Academy Award for ...

  3. Rosalind Franklin was an expert in a type of microscopic imaging called X-ray crystallography. During the early 20th century the concept of using X-rays to image a molecule was an emerging science. Rosalind decided to apply this science to the world of DNA. What she found astounded science and changed the structure of biology forever.

  4. Biography. Rosalind Franklin (1920–1958) is most famous for her work in X-ray crystallography, taking images of DNA molecules at King’s College London. ‘Photograph 51’, an image she took in May 1952, demonstrated the helical structure of DNA and enabled James Watson and Francis Crick to build the first model of the molecule.

  5. Apr 12, 2022 · Born in London in 1920 to a prominent British Jewish family, Rosalind Franklin attended St Paul’s Girls School, one of the few institutions at the time that taught physics and chemistry to girls. Indeed, by 15, Franklin knew that she wanted to be a scientist, in spite of her father actively discouraging her due to the difficulties of women ...

  6. They also spent time talking with scientists who were busy in their labs running experiments. One of these scientists was Rosalind Franklin (25 July 1920 – 16 April 1958). She was an expert in a technique called X-ray crystallography. Her work would hold the key to discovering the structure of DNA, the blueprint of life.

  7. Mar 25, 2024 · Rosalind Franklin was a chemist and X-ray crystallographer who studied DNA at King’s College London from 1951 to 1953, and her unpublished data paved the way for Watson and Crick’s breakthrough.

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