Scientist of the Year

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2011 R&D Magazine Scientist of the Year

The R&D Magazine Scientist of the Year award, now in its 46th year, has recognized science leaders including rocket pioneer Wernher Von Braun; Tim Berners-Lee, the father of the World Wide Web; J. Craig Venter, pioneer of genome sequencing; and Stephen Wolfram, developer of Mathematica.

Dr. Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy, is the recipient of the 2011 Scientist of the Year Award.

Bureaucrat in the Spotlight, Scientist in the Lab

Bureaucrat in the Spotlight, Scientist in the Lab

Even as the United States' top energy official, R&D Magazine’s 2011 Scientist of the Year Steven Chu keeps science close to home.

Answering Life's Great Questions, Systematically

Answering Life's Great Questions, Systematically

Not resting after a career full of achievement, Richard D. Smith is leading the charge toward the first comprehensive molecular characterization and modeling of biological systems.

2010 R&D Scientist of the Year: Richard D. Smith, PhD

2010 R&D Scientist of the Year: Richard D. Smith, PhD

Over the last three decades, Richard D. Smith, director of proteomics at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), has made numerous fundamental advances in mass spectrometry (MS) and the emerging field of proteomics.

Dr. Thomas C. Sparks’ Swarm of Ideas

Dr. Thomas C. Sparks’ Swarm of Ideas

By keeping an open mind and irrepressible optimism, the 2009 R&D Magazine Scientist of the Year helped Dow AgroSciences pioneer a new, green insect control technology.

Scientist of the Year - Dr. Thomas C. Sparks

Scientist of the Year - Dr. Thomas C. Sparks

By some estimates, there are more than a million insect species in this world. Only a small percentage of this number is detrimental to the quality of our lives, but these are the species that drive research by scientists like Dr. Thomas C. Sparks, R&D Magazine’s 44th Scientist of the Year. The entomologist’s job is to know these insects, even down to the molecular level, to discover ways to keep them from destroying a very precious commodity: our food.

Mario Paniccia: Conductor of Light

Mario Paniccia: Conductor of Light

At an Intel laboratory, R&D Magazine’s 2008 Scientist of the Year is designing the chips that are revolutionizing photonics and pointing the way to the terascale age of optical communications.

R&D Magazine’s 42nd Scientist of the Year

Before genomics, before computer software, and long before computer-aided chromatographs, a typical day in the chemistry lab involved arduous work. What might take minutes today required weeks a few decades ago, a fact well-known to George M. Whitesides who learned the chemist's trade as a teenager in his father's lab, studying compounds for rope treatments and enhancements to concrete.

Architect of the Future: Refocusing On Basic Research

Dr. Gerald Rubin is a researcher who works to understand the genomic structure of the Drosophila melanogaster, or common fruit fly. Rubin is also Vice President and Director of the Janelia Farm Research Campus (JFRC), the recently opened research facility of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), Chevy Chase, Md.

Leading the Fight Against Disease

The world is faced with tremendous medical challengesthat now, all too often, have come to include the wordpandemic. Consider the fact that HIV/AIDS, malaria,and tuberculosis alone are directly responsible formore than 4 million deaths per year.

Constant Focus on the Future

When George Poste left SmithKline Beecham in late-1999 after nearly 20 years of running many of their R&D operations, he thought that his future commuting route would be a lot different than his nearly weekly trips between SmithKline's headquarters in Philadelphia and its offices in Europe. "I had what I called my three-S triangle-Scottsdale (Ariz.), San Francisco, and San Diego," he explains. "That was going to be my commuting triangle and I would interact with a series of biotech companies in those cities and have more time to explore the landscape of Arizona."

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Blogs

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Judges wanted for the 50th Annual R&D 100 Awards

Judges wanted for the 50th Annual R&D 100 Awards

Expert in electronics? Professional in process science? Do you breathe biotech? If you have an area of expertise (and better yet, interest) consider spending a couple hours of your time and helping us evaluate some of the best and most unique high-technology products of the year.

Wanted: 2011's Top Technologies

Wanted: 2011's Top Technologies

The editors of R&D Magazine have opened the nominations for the 2012 R&D 100 Awards competition, which will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the awards. If your organization introduced a new product this year, or is planning to, you can begin the entry process now.

Multimedia

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January 25, 2012 Grand Rounds Lecture

Bioinformatic Approaches to Track HIV Epidemics. For transcripts of this and other NIH Clinical Center podcasts, visit http://www.cc.nih.gov/podcast/

CC Radio - Episode 85

Critical Care Medicine department hosts first joint education week for fellows. For transcripts of this and other NIH Clinical Center podcasts, visit http://www.cc.nih.gov/podcast/

New To Market

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Energy Harvesting Subsystems for Wireless Sensors
Energy Harvesting Subsystems for Wireless Sensors

Nextreme Thermal Solutions has developed two new energy harvesting subsystems for the plumbing and HVAC industries. The subsystems are the latest additions to Nextreme's Thermobility energy harvesting platform that uses thin-film thermoelectric technology to convert available thermal energy into electric power for a variety of autonomous self-powered applications.

Mini robots invade U.S. nanospace

Imina Technologies' miBots are gambling die-sized nanomanipulators which, unlike conventional systems, are virtually untethered and move independently. These miniature robots can travel around a microscope stage at 2 mm/sec and stop instantly, then manipulate and probe samples from biological cells to semiconductors.

Tools & Technology

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Pressure Gauge with Metric Fittings
Pressure Gauge with Metric Fittings

Omega Engineering's DPGM409 covers the full spectrum in pressure measurement with gauge, sealed gauge, absolute, compound gauge, vacuum, and barometric pressure ranges.

Diffusion Tubes

Kin-Tek Laboratories Inc.'s Trace Source configurable diffusion tubes extend the range of compounds that can be used to include subliming solids and viscous liquids. These tubes have a removable reservoir that allows filling with the capillary removed, so the component compound can be any consistency.

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