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  1. Apr 29, 2024 · The IAEA Lise Meitner Programme (LMP) provides early- and mid‑career women professionals with opportunities to participate in a multiweek visiting professional programme and advance their technical and soft skills. The IAEA Lise Meitner Programme Launch Livestream. Named after Austrian-Swedish physicist Lise Meitner, the visiting professional ...

  2. Sep 7, 2023 · Lise Meitner was born in Vienna in November of 1878. Marissa Moss: Okay, so she's born into a Jewish family in Austria and they live in the ghetto. And her father is a lawyer.

  3. Feb 11, 2021 · Lise Meitner, together with her nephew Otto Robert Frisch, interpreted the reaction as nuclear fission and calculated the huge quantity of energy released in the process. Nevertheless, in 1946 Otto Hahn was the sole recipient of the 1944 Nobel Prize in Chemistry “for his discovery of the fission of heavy nuclei”.

  4. Lise Meitner was born in 1878 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary, as one of eight children of Jewish lawyer Dr Philipp Meitner and Hedwig Meitner-Skovran. 1 She finished school at age fourteen since girls were not permitted to attend secondary school. Still, she had maintained an interest in science since childhood, recording experiments in a notebook kept under her pillow.

  5. Lise Meitner (født 7. november 1878, død 27. oktober 1968) var en fremtrædende østrigsk fysiker, der boede i Østrig, Tyskland, Sverige og England. Meitner var med til opdagelsen af grundstoffet protactinium og kernefission ( at et atoms kerne kan spaltes.

  6. Nov 1, 1996 · Abstract. Lise Meitner was a major player in the development of radioactivity and nuclear physics in the first half of the 20th century. For more than thirty years she collaborated with Otto Hahn, she with expertise in physics, he with expertise in chemistry. The crowning moment of their joint efforts came with the discovery of fission in 1938.

  7. Lise Meitner’s influential work concerning radioactivity in the early 20th century made her a target of the Nazis. She fled to Sweden in 1938, and it was there that she discovered the power of the fission reaction. Even though Meitner never worked on nuclear weapons, her 1939 research was essential in the research of nuclear power.